Friday, May 20, 2011

Floating plant for Asian gas need

Picture of a giant liquefied natural gas tankerA liquefied natural gas ship tanker arrives at a gas storage station in Japan
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Oil firm Royal Dutch Shell has announced it will build the world's first floating liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant.

The Prelude project was announced on Friday and analysts believe it could cost between $8bn (£4.9bn) and $15bn.

It will provide 3.6m tonnes of gas per annum to meet growing Asian demand and come on-stream in 2016.

The plant will be moored 200km from the Australian coast.

The company claim the platform will be the largest offshore facility in the world, around 488 meters long.

It is being built in South Korea by Samsung heavy industries.

Shell's executive director, Malcolm Brinded, said the technology would expand the amount of gas which could be reached economically.

“Gas is relatively easy to find and frankly probably getting cheaper to produce”

Johan Hedstrom Energy analyst, Southern Cross Equities

"(It) will allow us to develop offshore gas fields that would otherwise be too costly to develop," he said.

The project is likely to export gas throughout the region.

It would meet just over a third of China's current LNG demand at current levels - but that is expected to increase five times by 2020.

Japan is also increasing its LNG imports to meet demand due to reduced electricity supply from nuclear power. Japanese utility, Osaka Gas, signed up to import gas from the platform last year.

The investment marks the latest push into the gas sector by Shell which has been steadily increasing its production.

Analysts say investments in gas are likely to bring a lower return than oil as new supplies - especially from shale gas - become available.

"Gas is relatively easy to find and frankly probably getting cheaper to produce," said Johan Hedstrom, an Australian energy analyst at Southern Cross Equities.

"And you don't have an OPEC that controls gas, so you have to make up for the price weakness by doing more volume," he added.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/13465892

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