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The Geopolitics of Australian Natural Gas Development
Ronald D. Ripple, PhDMervin Bovaird Professor of Energy Business and Finance
Master of Energy Business ProgramSchool of Finance, Operations Management, and
International BusinessUniversity of Tulsa
32nd USAEE/IAEE North American Conference
Anchorage, Alaska28-31 July 2013
Outline
Australia’s geopolitical role is that of an exporter of natural gas in the form of LNG.
Australia’s role in the LNG trade; export trade partners.
Australia’s natural gas resource base. Australia’s LNG projects. Australia’s trade advantages and
disadvantages. Australia’s challenges: potential of US
LNG exports.
75% increase in Australian exports: NWS expansion and Darwin LNG start-up
China trade began in 2006
World trade increased 75%
Asia trade increased 69%
Japan trade increased 40%
Source: BP’s Statistical Review of World Energy, 2012 & 2006
Production supports exports and domestic use 2011: Australian production ~51 bcm, split
roughly evenly between domestic and export use country-wide
2011: WA production was split roughly 2/3 – 1/3 export/domestic
Australia’s Natural Gas Proved Reserves and Production, 1980-2011
[BP Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2012]
Australia’s Natural Gas Resource Base
Source: Santos, Cooper Basin Unconventional Gas Opportunities & Commercialisation, Nov 2012.
Australian LNG projects: Operating Under Construction and Planned (capacities – mtpa)
Source: LNG Business Review, February 2012.
Australian LNG Projects
Three operating projects with total annual capacity at 24.2 mt.
Seven projects under construction with total additional annual capacity of 61.5 mt.
The 61.5 mtpa represents about $190 billion in investment from a range of international and domestic parties.
The 61.5 mtpa represents 64.5% of all new capacity currently under construction world-wide.
Sometime prior to 2020, Australia will surpass the 77 mtpa of Qatar.
Australian LNG Advantageproximity to dynamic and growing Asian markets
Port Dist (nautical miles) 14 knots 20 knots 14 knots 20 knots 14 knots 20 knotsDarwin 3072 8d 19h 6d 10h 2,197,917$ 1,604,167$ 0.73$ 0.54$ Doha 6655 19d 10h 13d 21h 4,854,167$ 3,468,750$ 1.62$ 1.16$
Difference (Australia advantage) 0.89$ 0.62$
Days - hours Cost @$125,000/d Cost/MMBtu
LNG Carrier shipping cost (only) comparison between Australia and Qatar140,000 m3 tanker => ~ 2,995,000 MMBtu
Destination - Tokyo [accounts for round trip travel time]
Australia’s US LNG Export Challenge?
US natural gas resource base – shale gas revolution
US natural gas export approvals Expected size of the Asia-Pacific
LNG trade US LNG shipping distances
Expected size of the Asia Market
BP’s Outlook to 2030 projects Asia consumption from all sources to increase by 60%, relative to 2011, while Asia production is projected to increase by 52%.
This will result in a gap, which is expected to continue to grow, of 159.2 mt equivalent in 2020.
LNG capacity under construction in 2013 equals 95.3 mtpa, which includes the 61.5 mtpa in Australia and the 9.0 mtpa Cheniere Sabine Pass project in the US.
US – Tokyo shipping distances
Through the Panama Canal (once the expansion is complete) = 9,247 nautical miles.
More than 3 times the Australian distances. Around South Africa = 15,957 nautical miles.
More than 5 times the Australian distances.
Conclusion
Australia has played an important geopolitical role in the growth of the natural gas trade in LNG.
Australia will continue to play an important role, especially as it expands to be the largest LNG exporter.
Australia will face competition, even in traditional markets, but the market is also expected to grow substantially.
Thank you for your attention.
I am happy to answer questions?
Prof Ronald D RippleEmail: [email protected]
Phone: 918-631-3659