Global Demand Picture For Natural Gas Looks Increasingly Sour

 | Sep 01, 2015 02:49AM ET

Bearish moods seemed to have permanently settled in energy markets. The first and most obvious victim of the nosediving oil prices has been natural gas.

Once seen invincible, liquefied natural gas (LNG) growth could now be racing to the edge of a cliff. Falling natural gas prices and fears about slowing demand in European and Asia all point to the return of a buyers’ market. Meanwhile, as crude prices fall, the oil-indexed European and Asian LNG contracts are plummeting in value, making upcoming LNG projects unsustainable. The pessimistic scenario seems to be reinforced by slumping demand in Asia, where the majority of new and existing LNG volumes were heading.

Last week Japan’s Kyushu Electric Power Company (TOKYO:9508) hooked its Sendai-1 nuclear power plant to the grid and expects to ramp up its generation to 12 percent of the country’s gas imports.

Up until recently, Japan’s incredible demand for imported energy kept a floor beneath LNG prices. Japan imported a record 120 bcm of gas in 2014 or close to 36 percent of world’s total LNG exports. Not surprisingly JCC (Japanese Crude Cocktail) LNG oil-indexed prices remained above the $15/MMBtu mark for most of 2014.

However, the situation has changed dramatically since the winter of 2015. With Brent losing more than half of its value, gas prices in Asia have plummeted to around the winter season .

Additional worries about the Chinese economy are likely to depress prices further in 2015 and 2016 as the gap between European and Asian hub quotes narrow.

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The shale gas revolution upended gas markets because the U.S. no longer needed the previously projected gas imports, leaving new gas giants, including Qatar and Australia, scrambling to justify their multi-billion investments in costly LNG infrastructure. The supply glut drove prices down around the world.