US gas producers shrug off low prices, bet on LNG boom
RoydadNaft – Energy executives say they are looking past current ultra-cheap gas prices and betting on a coming wave of new liquefied natural gas (LNG) plants to lift demand – and prices – for the fuel.
Natural gas prices have fallen by one-third this year, undercut by a warmer winter, outages at LNG facilities and higher-than-expected output. The growth in solar and wind power and a pause on new U.S. LNG export permit reviews also have clouded the outlook for future gas demand.
“It will certainly take some time for LNG coming out of the U.S. and a bit of a slowdown in supply to rebalance,” said Zamarin, speaking on the sidelines of the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston.
Oversupply in West Texas, home of the top U.S. oilfield, had prices this week at a negative 26 cents per million British thermal units (mmBtu), requiring gas producers to pay someone to take the fuel. U.S. gas prices were trading at $1.66 per mmBtu on Friday, down 74% from the average price in 2022.
New pipelines and LNG processing plants would allow the U.S. to export the gas now clogging those West Texas lines and supply sustained energy while sun and wind power grow. China and India are moving away from coal to natural gas for electric power, and Europe has turned to the U.S. to replace Russian pipeline gas.
Further U.S. demand for natural gas will likely come from domestic power utilities straining to supply electricity for new data centers that support artificial intelligence, crypto mining and the increasingly digital economy.
But John Podesta, the Biden administration’s climate envoy, said the power needs could be filled by solar, wind and renewables rather than gas.
“More electrification in the quest for decarbonisation means more pressure to produce clean generation,” he said.
