No doubt about it, there had been signs of an "overbuild," and the liquefaction market had displayed bubbliciousness, but Vladimir Putin will probably hog all the credit for popping the already deflating LNG bubble. Before his clever machinations, US natural gas prices had hit a decade low of $1.90 per million BTUs in 2012 with the wildfire spread of shale gas drilling, while the 2011 earthquake and Fukushima disaster caused Japan to take its nuclear power plants offline, sending Asian gas prices skyrocketing to painful levels. Recently, however, the big price spread started to shrink as new LNG exports came online and Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pushed to restart some of the country's nuclear reactors.
But first, Putin changed the rules by annexing the Crimea and menacing the Ukraine shortly after the Sochi Winter Olympics, which looked like a rash power grab, tainting millions of dollars of cheerful McDonald's ads and Olympic goodwill. US media quickly shoe-horned him into a Cold War mold: his gambit, a nostalgic - almost pathetic - attempt to reconstitute Mother Russia by snatching an EU-leaning prize. While partially true, it now looks more like Putin wanted to dramatically signal a cold shoulder to the Russian-gas-addicted West before "looking East" to secure new energy markets in China. (I imagine that Putin wears either an aspirational Oprah or Al Pacino Scarface tattoo hidden below his belt line.)
Once the gas starts flowing
But credit where credit's due: shortly after Russia's Crimea incursion and its global PR fallout, Putin accelerated declining energy prices throughout Asia with one stroke of the pen after China signed a landmark 30-year, $400 billion deal to buy Russian natural gas. This mutually beneficial nat gas real politic boldly showed that Russia could diversify far beyond whiny Europe; and for smoggy and polluted China, it showed a strong resolve to curb its politically sensitive reliance on coal that was threatening its tenuous legitimacy. The huge deal calls for Russia's Gazprom to ship 38 billion cubic meters of gas annually to China, about a quarter of the country's annual consumption. To deliver the natural gas, Russia will build a pipeline to link northeast China to a pipeline that carries gas from western Siberia to the Pacific port of Vladivostok. Once the gas starts flowing, China will probably pay $10.50 to $11 per million British thermal units, which would undercut the current spot price of $13.30 for LNG delivered to Asia. Spot LNG prices are at a 19-month low after falling from a record of $19.70 in February. That's change an Russian oligarch or Chinese princeling can believe in. It "opened the door for Russia to enter into Asia's growing gas market," Keun-Wook Paik, senior research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, told Fuelfix. Potential LNG exporters are quickly recalibrating the dream of supplying energy to Asia as India, and Japan also begin to consider new options. It's a good bet that many phantom LNG plants will never break ground.The India domino
The Russia-China pipeline buzz has already begun to spread. India's Financial Express reported that during the World Petroleum Congress held in Moscow, Indian petroleum minister Dharmendra Pradhan discussed with his Russian counterpart, Alexander Novak, setting up a extension of the Russia-China pipeline.
The Japanese domino
After seeing the deal with China, anxious Japanese lawmakers are reviving efforts for a $5.9 billion natural gas pipeline from Russia. They no longer want to be the Gilligan's Island of energy and plan to propose the project to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe soon enough to be the radar when Vladimir Putin visits in autumn.