HomeNewsOpinionIs natural gas about to become a buyer’s market?

Is natural gas about to become a buyer’s market?

It’s not too soon for Europe to plan for a world flush with LNG supplied by the US and Qatar

October 26, 2023 / 14:48 IST
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Natural gas
An LNG tanker for Qatar under construction in South Korea in 2020. (Source: Bloomberg)

For the second straight winter, Europe’s energy strategy is based largely on hopes for mild weather and reduced industrial demand, with gas prices still hovering at about 50 euros ($53) per megawatt-hour, more than double the average in the decade before Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

But it’s not too soon to begin imagining — and planning for — a less desperate future: instead of a world of scarcity, one of abundant liquefied natural gas supplies provided by the US and Qatar.

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For that, however, things must go as exactly as planned. And after two years of rolling crisis, the wording “as planned” carries a lot of weight. There’s hope, but, for at least the next year and a half, it’s just that: hope.

“Starting in 2025, an unprecedented surge in new LNG projects is set to tip the balance of markets and concerns about natural gas supply,” the International Energy Agency said this week, echoing a view that’s gaining traction in the market. “A wave of new LNG export projects is set to remodel gas markets.” Fatih Birol, the head of the agency, went even further: “The gas market will move into the direction of buyer’s market.”