Global Liquefied Natural Gas Supplies Are Sold Out Until 2026, Major LNG Importer Warns
Global Liquefied Natural Gas Supplies Are Sold Out Until 2026, Major LNG Importer Warns

By Naveen Athrappully

Japan, the leading importer of liquefied natural gas (LNG), is warning about supplies getting tighter over the coming years due to competitive markets and underinvestment in supply.

Long-term LNG contracts prior to 2026 have all been sold out, a survey of Japanese firms by the country’s trade ministry has found. “The LNG procurement environment has changed completely. Procurement can also be said to be in a state of war,” the companies said to the ministry, according to Business Insider. Such contracts are often the basis of reliable supply and stable prices for many years.

As such, the shortage of these contracts can set the stage for conflict among nations to secure LNG deliveries. The absence of long-term contracts leaves buyers dependent on the more expensive and volatile spot market, where prices are trading roughly three times higher than that of the contracts.

Last year, around 30 percent of all LNG deliveries were through spot markets, according to an estimate by the International Group of Liquefied Natural Gas Importers.

The trade ministry document also pointed out that underinvestment in LNG export projects is a factor that will keep supply tight for several years. If the Russian pipeline gas supply to Europe is blocked completely, there could be a shortage of 7.6 million tons of LNG by January 2025.

“Winter of 2023 is looming on many buyers’ minds, as the LNG market is expected to tighten on the back of Europe’s growing demand, as more LNG import capacity is installed and China returns to spot markets,” Vortexa Ltd.’s Felix Booth, head of LNG, said in an interview with Natural Gas Intel.

However, as far as next year is concerned, Japan is in a good position to shield itself from volatile spot prices thanks to a healthy number of term contracts it has racked up.

Russia–European Union Impact

Beginning next year, buyers from Europe are set to increase LNG imports given the region’s tensions with Moscow. This will only heat up the competition in the LNG market. Europe is already competing with Asian buyers for LNG from Qatar.

Until 2026—when some projects in Qatar and the United States will come online—the global gap between LNG supply and demand is not expected to ease much.

An analysis by Bloomberg projects that the U.S. supply of LNG to Europe is not set to grow much over the coming years. For traders to find Europe an attractive market, it has to pull roughly 70 percent of international spot supplies of LNG, mainly from America.

“U.S. supply is particularly price sensitive and will flow to the premium market, which Europe will remain unless Asian demand picks up,” analyst Arun Toora told Bloomberg.

“However the year-on-year increase is not sufficient to offset a total cut in Russian piped supply, with under half of these volumes met by LNG increases.” The European Union and the United Kingdom account for about 60 percent of American LNG supply.

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