Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Ballooning Natural Gas Supply-Demand Deficit to Fuel LNG Imports

India‟s natural gas supply has been adversely impacted in 2011-12 due to fall in KG D6 production to 46.6 MMSCMD in H1 2011-12 from 55.9 MMSCMD in 2010-11. KG D6 production is likely to remain at subdued levels over the next couple of years, especially in comparison to the earlier anticipated production of 60-80 MMSCMD. Overall, ICRA expects domestic natural gas supplies to increase to around 153 MMSCMD by 2014-15 from 143 MMSCMD in 2010-11. The current estimate is about 22% lower than our previous estimates of 195 MMSCMD primarily due to lower KG-D6 production and delays anticipated in commissioning of KG satellite fields. 


On the demand front, despite the significantly high potential across several sectors, the realisable demand for natural gas will be a function of gas supplies in the market at reasonable price, the price competitiveness of gas as compared to alternative fuels, timely commissioning of the proposed transmission pipeline infrastructure, and regulatory initiatives in the power sector. 


ICRA believes that demand will increase from new customers once the bottlenecks in the trunk pipeline are cleared in the near to medium term. Overall, ICRA expects gas demand to rise to around 410 MMSCMD by 2019-20 from the actual consumption of around 177 MMSCMD in 2010-11. ICRA believes that India, despite the long-term contracted LNG volumes with Australia and mid-term contracts signed by GAIL, needs to secure additional supply on a long-term basis, especially in view of less-than-anticipated domestic supply and possible shortage of LNG after a couple of years. India‟s high reliance on LNG is expected to increase further, which will pose significant risks in a scenario of tight LNG supply demand scenario, leading to low availability and high prices of spot LNG. 


As regards gas allocation and pooling, an inter-ministerial committee has recently recommended i) preferential allotment of available domestic natural gas to core sectors, that is, fertiliser and power sectors, along with a certain amount reserved for the CGD/CNG sector, ii) cap on domestic gas allocation to certain other sectors and iii) inferred gas price to be used as benchmark for domestic gas pricing. The committee has not suggested any form of pooling at the all-India level across industries but the objective has been assumed to be served by indirect pooling at the end of consumers, with price-sensitive sectors (fertiliser/power/CGD) getting a higher share of cheaper domestic gas. ICRA believes that the policy recommendations, if accepted, will provide more clarity to gas usage mix and pricing, which in turn would help companies across industries to formulate their capital expenditure plans (capex) and future requirements of natural gas.


To read the full report: NATURAL GAS

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