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Cheniere expects US LNG plants to use 40 bcf per day of natural gas in the coming years

Anatol Feyegin, Chief Commercial Officer at Cheniere Energy, said that U.S. LNG plants may be able to take up as much as 40 billion cubic feet of natural gases per day over the next few years. According to LSEG data, U.S. LNG plants are using a record amount of natural gas (18 bcfd) to produce LNG.

Feygin, speaking at a Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City seminar, said that the increased demand for gas liquefaction may lead to higher natural gas prices. Prices have risen by 62% in the last year and could become even more costly towards the end of this decade.

"You saw it in 22/23 when COVID came out. LNG returned to full utilization, and then increased. Nymex saw an increase in the single digits. Feygin stated that the supply would respond very quickly, indicating that drillers could increase production to meet increased demand. The executive stated that there is concern about a glut of LNG as more capacity is added. However, he said that Asian countries like Bangladesh and Pakistan may be drawn in by the lower prices to increase demand.

Feygin stated that the world will need 30 million metric tonnes of LNG each year to meet the global demand growth. The majority of this new capacity will come from the U.S. He said that rising construction costs were behind some of the final investment decisions made in U.S. LNG.

Feygin explained that "more than two-thirds" of the FID in this year were completed because fixed-priced EPC contract expires soon and the rush was on to keep the cost of construction of the LNG plant low. Feygin stated that the U.S. gas sector could produce up to 300 mtpa. However, he acknowledged that this rapid growth could be a challenge for some producers who are not prepared to deal with periods of low prices.

He warned that only 17% of new capacity from plants which reached FID in this year had been sold on long-term contracts. Many portfolio players were unprepared. Curtis Williams, Houston (Reporting) and Leslie Adler Nathan Crooks Edmund Klmaann edited the article.

(source: Reuters)