Saturday, October 22, 2016

Indonesia Holds 63 Uncommitted LNG Cargoes For 2017 Delivery

Indonesia Holds 63 Uncommitted LNG Cargoes For 2017 Delivery

There are currently 63 uncommitted cargoes of LNG for 2017 delivery from
Indonesia's Tangguh and Bontang projects, Wiratmaja Puja, the country's
Director General of Oil and Gas, said on Thursday.

"We are still oversupplied," Puja said, noting that the government was
looking for committed buyers and that deals for 13 of the cargoes were
currently being negotiated.

"It would be real pity if we had to cut production."

The 63 cargoes is the equivalent of about 6.99 million tonnes of LNG, based
on Reuters calculations. A standard sized LNG cargo contains about 150 to
170 million cubic metres of natural gas or about 111,000 to 125,800 tonnes
of LNG.

Last year, Indonesia exported just over 17 million tonnes of LNG.

Puja added that for 2018 there were still "more than 60" uncommitted
cargoes.

Indonesia gets priority on a large portion of domestically produced LNG, but
development of infrastructure to absorb the fuel has been slower than hoped
both locally and abroad, putting pressure on gas prices.

"We have prepared everything that has been requested for electricity, but we
are still developing the infrastructure," Puja said, meaning that LNG supply
has been allocated.

Despite the inability to use the gas domestically and falling demand abroad,
Indonesia has approved an expansion of the Tangguh LNG project in the
country's West Papua province that will boost annual LNG production capacity
by 50%.

Indonesia is looking to expand small-scale LNG regasification capacity in
central and eastern Indonesia in order to meet soaring energy demand in the
region and to soak up LNG supply.

The country has ramped up gas consumption targets for environmental reasons,
and plans to subsidise natural gas for industrial buyers.

The LNG demand target from Indonesian state power utility Perusahaan Listrik
Negara (PLN), however, was unchanged this year, amid slower growth in
electricity use and declining industrial power demand.

Indonesia is the world's 11th largest gas producer, according to the
Indonesian Gas Society, and ships LNG from Bontang and Tangguh to Japan,
South Korea and China, as well as to domestic buyers.

Badak NGL, which operates the Bontang LNG plant, is a unit of state energy
company Pertamina, while the Tangguh project is majority owned by BP.

Asian LNG gas prices hit a nine-month high of $6.55 per million British
thermal units this month. That's still 51% below the price two years ago.

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Ref:
http://www.downstreambusiness.com/indonesia-holds-63-uncommitted-lng-cargoes
-2017-delivery-591496?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTmpJM1pXSm1NalJsT1dWaiIsInQiOiJONmRJMX
k0a2NMYmY2ZGdYK0U4QW9EZGNtam5vZWtIWUFLTkcyeEI2N05YcW5SRENpSWxrSG5xdVhkRlFrUH

o2eGFwdlh5b2IyXC9QRHA1RjMyaVdTOE1vUzd6Tm5vMzZYOEZhTG5YZmYrT0E9In0%3D

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John Diecker
APT Consulting Group Co., Ltd.

www.aptthailand.com

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