China Gas Sellers Sidestep State Giants to Ride Demand Surge
(Bloomberg) -- China’s independent energy firms are seeking to circumvent its state-backed giants as they cash in on swelling natural gas use, buoyed by President Xi Jinping’s drive for cleaner fuels and nimbler companies.
New import facilities developed by firms including Guanghui Energy Co. and ENN Group offer direct access to cheap liquefied natural gas and cut their reliance on supply and infrastructure controlled by the the country’s national oil companies. That may help new players tap China’s booming gas demand, up 15 percent in the first half of the year.
“The key thing about having your own terminal is that you can take advantage of potentially lower pricing in the market,” said Neil Beveridge, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in Hong Kong. “Also, it’s very difficult to get supply through the infrastructure of the Chinese oil majors because the access rules and regulations are not terribly transparent and not terribly well enforced.”
Smaller gas distributors and importers have found an opening as Xi’s government seeks alternatives to coal and encourages private competition in the energy sector. They’re poised to follow a similar trend in the oil industry, where independent refiners known as “teapots” have been allowed greater freedom to import crude, helping push China ahead of the U.S. this year as the world’s biggest importer.
Guanghuai Energy last month received the second LNG cargo at its Qidong terminal, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) north of Shanghai. At least three more terminals are under construction or proposed including a port by ENN Group that’s scheduled to start next year. Guangzhou Development Group Inc. has proposed a new import terminal, as has China Huadian Corp., one of the nation’s biggest power generators, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
New private ports enhance the bargaining power for distributors, which will lower downstream sales prices and boost China’s consumption, ENN Energy Holdings Ltd., the listed unit of ENN Group, said in an emailed response to questions. It declined to comment specifically on the Zhoushan LNG terminal owned by its parent, which didn’t respond to a separate request for comment.
Xinjiang-based Guanghui, which was one of the first non-state companies to receive a license to import crude, plans to allow third parties to deliver and store LNG at the Qidong site, chief engineer Xue Wenting said last month. The terminal’s annual capacity will be expanded to 3 million metric tons by 2019 from 650,000 tons now, he said.
Jovo Energy Co., which was the first private Chinese company to begin importing LNG, began operating its Dongguan facility in Guangdong in 2012. The company also stores and sells liquefied petroleum gas and has an oil and chemicals business, according to its website.
China, which is forecast to more than double LNG purchases by 2022, has more than a dozen import terminals owned by its three state energy giants, which buy most of their cargoes on long-term contracts. But given the current global gas glut, new buyers can pick up cheaper shipments on the spot market, where analysts at SCI International estimate costs are about 50 percent less than average rates under the country’s existing term contracts.
“Those companies can get cheaper LNG prices from the spot market on a more flexible basis and they can meet demand from their widespread distribution networks,” said Maggie Kuang, an analyst with BNEF in Singapore.
China’s LNG demand will expand by 5 million to 6 million tons annually over the next few years and private investors may account for about 20 percent of that growth, according to Michal Meidan, an analyst with Energy Aspects Ltd. in London. Bernstein’s Beveridge estimates that share to be less than 10 percent of the 60 million tons of LNG he forecasts the country will be importing annually by the end of the decade.
China’s national oil companies account for about 92 percent of the country’s long-term contracts and “still firmly dominate the LNG import market,” said BNEF analyst Nannan Kou. While Guanghui Energy has been buying spot LNG, it’s seeking to sign long-term contracts with suppliers, including Malaysia’s Petroliam Nasional Bhd, chief engineer Xue said.
The Chinese government is encouraging private capital to help construct LNG receiving facilities and pipelines, according to guidelines published last month by the country’s National Development and Reform Commission. China’s top economic planner also said LNG import capacity and natural gas pipeline length will more than double in the 10 years to 2025.
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