Introduction
For the past half decade, LNG volumes in the
Atlantic have been tight as expansions in receiving
capacity have outstripped liquefaction more than
two to one. At times, U.S. import capacity has
sat woefully idle with as little as 30% utilization.
The first years for some new terminals, such as
Excelerate Energy's Gulf Gateway, have been so
slow that utilization has fallen below 5%.
This is set to change, however, as new liquefaction
opens up in Norway, Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea,
Algeria, Libya and possibly Angola, Russia and
Venezuela/Trinidad. Moreover, as Sakhalin, Tangguh
and Train 5 of the North West Shelf Venture come
onstream in the Pacific, Qatari, Omani and Yemeni
volumes may begin to flow westward through the
Suez to Southern Europe, the U.K. and ultimately
the U.S. Gulf Coast.
Does this mean the tables will shift in the Atlantic
from a seller's to a buyer's market? Certainly
the overhang of excess receiving capacity will
diminish. Investors are adding shipping capacity
to transport LNG cargos in all directions as new
receiving terminals on Canada's East Coast, offshore
Boston and Florida, in the Gulf of Mexico, the
Caribbean and Brazil as well as all around Europe
from the North Adriatic to Milford Haven, UK,
open. Additional docks, tanks, vaporizers and
downstream pipelines are being added to many existing
terminals as well.
So, how will increased liquidity affect Atlantic
markets? Are the golden years of arbitrage drawing
to a close? Could peace in Nigeria swamp the market
with more than 4.0 billion cubic feet per day
(40 bcmy) of new supplies? Will fast-track offshore
regasification vessels further extend delivery
opportunities and flatten seasonal premiums? These
are some of the questions to be addressed during
this conference.
November 8-9, Zeus is hosting "Atlantic
Basin LNG: The Next Decade" to identify the
key issues before the LNG industry as the Atlantic
marketplace enters its second decade of trade.
Join us for what promises to be an exciting and
thought-provoking forum. |