石油价格


国际天然气联盟(IGU)在一份新报告中表示,天然气需求和政策前所未有的不确定性以及新生产投资水平较低,可能会引发新的能源危机,并损害能源安全和气候目标,因为这将阻碍煤炭的发展  本星期。

新的天然气投资对于防止价格冲击至关重要 - 石油和天然气 360

资料来源:路透社

IGU 表示,去年生产和液化投资有所回升,每年增长 23%,但增长增量仍远低于 2013-2014 年的水平。IGU 代表全球天然气行业,覆盖全球天然气市场的 90% 以上。

IGU 表示:“尽管当前市场事件出现了增长和积极情绪,但液化天然气市场未来轨迹以及天然气在能源转型中的作用的巨大不确定性继续严重影响甚至在某些情况下延迟投资决策。”与意大利天然气电网运营商 Snam 和研究公司 Rystad Energy 合作编写的报告中。

报告作者指出,“这反过来又给几个关键方面带来了重大挑战,包括供应安全、行业发展可预测性、未满足的需求和定价等。”

天然气联盟表示,世界需要对天然气生产进行新的投资,以抵消成熟油田的产量下降以及一些地区天然气需求可能增长的影响。

2014年至2020年间,天然气供应开发投资下降了58%,直到2021年才开始小幅复苏。

IGU表示,由于资产到期,如果不进行额外投资,未来几十年全球天然气供应将下降。

一些需求情景预计天然气需求下降的速度比之前预期的要早。由于许多国家希望减少对外国化石燃料的依赖,这种前所未有的需求不确定性以及加速可再生能源发电能力的推动,给运营商带来了对其潜在天然气资产未来的很大不确定性。

天然气游说团体表示,许多不确定性阻碍了一些投资决策。

“不同情景下的预期需求水平存在巨大差异——包括那些预计需求大幅减少以致当今世界任何地方都不需要新天然气项目的情景——使得规划投资变得非常具有挑战性,而日益增长的限制性政策环境提高了这些投资的成本,”工会表示。

可再生能源和电气化目前还面临着资金供应方面的挑战,这可能会延迟可再生能源的采用,并使资金从基本天然气开发上转移。

IGU 指出,这“可能会在当前和未来几十年内导致能源市场发生重大动荡”。

“因此,需要统筹规划,确保投资信号不脱离实际,并有足够的资金用于投资。”

分析师和贸易商表示,自能源危机爆发以来,欧洲的天然气需求一直在下降,而且 需求可能会持续下降。

然而,尽管推动可再生能源加速发展,欧洲仍然需要天然气来替代俄罗斯失去的供应,并且需要数年甚至数十年。

本月早些时候,壳牌和道达尔能源公司 与卡塔尔能源公司签署了为期 27 年的协议, 从 2026 年开始,从卡塔尔扩大的项目中分别向荷兰和法国供应液化天然气。

在俄罗斯入侵乌克兰之前,欧洲不愿承诺长期液化天然气供应协议。但去年的天然气价格冲击清楚地表明,即使需求没有恢复到战前水平,仍然需要天然气。

与此同时,亚洲的天然气需求将继续增长。如果天然气价格实惠,南亚和东南亚未来可能会用天然气取代更多的燃煤发电,并可能确保更多的能源供应,并结束停电和能源配给。

然而,天然气的承受能力将取决于本十年将有多少新产量上线。在缺乏支持性投资信号的情况下,供应将追赶需求,这可能导致新的价格飙升和冲击。

天然气联盟在报告中表示,“尽管现有能源转型方案存在显着的不确定性,但预计未来几十年天然气仍将是全球能源市场的重要参与者。”

“然而,未来天然气供应水平很大程度上取决于机遇。”

 

 

作者:Oilprice.com 的 Tsvetana Paraskova


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


Unprecedented uncertainty in natural gas demand and policies and low levels of investment in new production risk creating fresh energy crises and undermining energy security and climate goals as it would stall the move away from coal, the International Gas Union (IGU) said in a new report this week.

New natural gas investments are crucial to prevent price shocks- oil and gas 360

Source: Reuters

Investments in production and liquefaction recovered somewhat last year, rising by 23% annually, but growth additions remain well below the 2013-2014 levels, said the IGU, which represents the global gas industry covering over 90% of the global gas market.

“Despite growth and positive sentiments amidst current market events, significant uncertainty around the LNG market’s future trajectory and the role of gas in the energy transition continues to weigh heavily on, and in some cases delay, investment decisions,” IGU said in the report prepared in cooperation with Italian gas grid operator Snam and research firm Rystad Energy.

“This in turn poses significant challenges for several critical aspects, including supply security, industry development predictability, unmet demand, and pricing, among others,” the report’s authors noted.

The world needs new investments in natural gas production to offset the decline from mature fields and likely growth in gas demand in several regions, the gas union said.

Between 2014 and 2020, investment in gas supply development crashed by 58% and only started to marginally recover in 2021.

Due to maturing assets, global gas supply would decline in the coming decades without additional investments, the IGU said.

Some demand scenarios project declines in natural gas demand sooner than previously assumed. This unprecedented demand uncertainty and the push to accelerate installations of renewable power capacity as many countries look to reduce dependence on foreign fossil fuels create a lot of uncertainty among operators about the future of their potential natural gas assets.

The many uncertainties are holding some investment decisions back, the gas lobby group said.

“The very large difference in levels of anticipated demand across different scenarios – including those that project such deep demand reductions that no new natural gas projects are needed anywhere in the world today – make it very challenging to plan investments, while the increasingly restrictive policy environment has raised the cost of these investments,” the union said.

Renewables and electrification are also currently facing challenges in capital availability, which could delay renewable energy adoption and divert capital away from essential gas developments.

This “would cause major turbulence in energy markets in the current and coming decades,” the IGU noted.

“Hence, there is a need for integrated planning to ensure investment signals are not disconnected from reality, and sufficient capital is available for the investments.”

Europe, which has seen gas demand decline since the start of the energy crisis, is likely to see a lasting loss of demand, analysts and traders say.

However, despite the push to accelerate renewables, Europe still needs natural gas to replace the lost Russian supply, and will need it for years and decades.

Earlier this month, Shell and TotalEnergies signed 27-year deals with QatarEnergy to deliver LNG to the Netherlands and France, respectively, from Qatar’s expanded projects starting in 2026.

Before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Europe was reluctant to commit to long-term LNG supply deals. But the gas price shock from last year has made clear that gas will be needed even if demand doesn’t return to pre-war levels.

Meanwhile, gas demand in Asia is set to continue growing. If natural gas is affordable, South and Southeast Asia could replace in the future more coal-fired power generation with gas and possibly ensure greater access to energy and an end to blackouts and energy rationing.

The affordability of natural gas, however, will depend on how much new production will come online this decade. In the absence of supportive investment signals, supply will play catch-up with demand, which could lead to new price spikes and shocks.

“Despite the remarkable uncertainty across existing energy transition scenarios, natural gas is expected to remain a significant participant in global energy markets in the coming decades,” the gas union said in its report.

“However, the level of future natural gas supply has been largely left to chance.”

 

 

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com