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Australia’s LNG Export Boom Is Leaving Its East Coast Short On Gas

Eastern Australia is once again under threat of a gas shortage in case LNG producers decide to sell all of their uncontracted gas abroad, a watchdog has warned.

"The east coast gas supply forecast for 2023 has improved, but the outlook remains uncertain as the LNG producers haven't yet committed sufficient volume under firm contracts to address the risk of a domestic shortfall," the chair of the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission, Gina Cass-Gottlieb said today, as quoted by Reuters.

Australian LNG producers enjoyed record revenues last year thanks to Europe's switch from pipeline gas to LNG, even though Australia did not become a large exporter to the continent. However, as Europe drew cargos that would have otherwise gone to Asia, the latter became an even bigger buyer of Australian liquefied gas.

Indeed, one LNG cargo was shipped from Australia to Germany despite the added costs of the long journey. The buyer was freshly nationalized Uniper, and the seller was Woodside.

It is because of this export boom that the ACCC has been warning of shortages. Last year, in August, the watchdog also issued a warning that unless the government steps in and limits exports, the east coast would plunge into a gas shortage.

In its latest warning, the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission noted that there are three LNG producers operating in eastern Australia, and they have been net withdrawers of gas from the domestic market for the last two years, and this has raised the danger of a shortage.

In the meantime, the Australian government has introduced price caps on domestic gas in a bid to ease the burden on households and businesses. The gas industry immediately slammed the move as unwise, noting that it would affect future investment decisions, and not in a favorable way. One company, Senex Energy, suspended a gas investment project days after the cap was announced.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

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Irina Slav

Irina is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing on the oil and gas industry. More

Comments

  • George Doolittle - 27th Jan 2023 at 9:59pm:
    Chevron earnings report so massive i find a failure to *"play ball"* over what is utmost clarity in the Law beyond unlikely. Anyhow Tesla has already solved so many problems in this regard the only *amazing* matter at hand is that the share price has *MERELY* risen by 70% year to date and not doubled.

    Long $ibm International Business Machines

    Strong buy
    At least a name that didn't collapse 90% last Year anyways. Even pays a dividend! Right up there with *"Putin orders most attack!"* as set your watch by that at the moment tho why this is so is beyond mysterious and perplexing would be the understatement of all time.
  • DoRight Deikins - 27th Jan 2023 at 10:35am:
    OK, let's figure this out. There is insufficient NG on the east coast, because the producers can get a higher price by exporting. There is a price cap on domestic NG, so that consumers won't pay as much, which increases the disparity between domestic sales and exports. So why would the producers desire to sell it domestically or invest more in production when their ROI is being kicked in the shins?

    And some would say (especially those with lots of disposable income) that higher domestic prices are good because they encourage alternate forms of energy (which though touted as being free always seem to cost more!)

    Someone once said, "If they can't afford bread, let them eat cake." Though it seems that it didn't end well for her either.
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