LNG demand is set to increase significantly

We keep on saying. The advantages are there, it’s available, it’s cheaper than oil and  and much cleaner…

This article is mostly about Australian projects though, but check those numbers and compare them to InterOil..

Liquefied gas is looking solid
By Martin Roth
October 28, 2009

Not only is demand for LNG rising but analysts say its price could hit all-time highs within a few years.

Projects involving liquefied natural gas development are shaping up as a major investment opportunity for those with a long-term perspective.

More than a dozen projects worth well over $100 billion have been proposed. They may not all go ahead but a sufficient number should proceed, providing a huge boost to the relevant companies.

Woodside Petroleum has said that as its massive Pluto project comes onstream, its LNG revenues could soar fivefold. Another company, Oil Search, believes its planned LNG development in Papua New Guinea will lead to a trebling of its annual oil and gas production.

LNG production is a complex and expensive process. It involves locating gas deposits, then converting the gas to liquid in order to transport it overseas. Australia has extensive gas reserves and is set to become one of the world’s leaders in LNG.

As a relatively clean source of energy, gas is increasingly being called for by power suppliers around the world. In particular, demand from the fast-growing economies of Asia is stimulating much of the development work in Australia, although the US – where gas reserves are dwindling steadily – is also viewed as having long-term potential.

Not only is demand growing but prices could rise substantially, providing a further boost to producers.

“We are very bullish on the oil price,” says a resources analyst at Fat Prophets, Nick Raffan. “I can see it easily back to its all-time highs within a couple of years.

“And that will take the LNG price with it, because that is determined according to a complex formula based on the lagging oil price.”

At present there are “three games in town” for LNG developments, according to Tony Wiggins, the director of specialist resources fund manager EIM Capital Managers, which runs the Emerging Resources Company Share Fund.

The first is Western Australia, where Woodside expects LNG production to begin at its $14 billion Pluto development in early 2011, and where a foreign consortium led by Chevron is proceeding with the $50 billion Gorgon project.

The second is PNG, where Oil Search has about a one-third stake in a $17 billion project led by ExxonMobil. Formal approval to proceed with the development is expected by the end of the year, with the first production in 2013 or 2014.

The third area of development is Curtis Island off Gladstone in Queensland, with a series of major LNG projects, including an $8 billion scheme led by Santos and Petronas, based on the region’s coal seam gas with production possible from 2014. Arrow Energy is also active in this region.

However, analysts caution that investors should be aware of particular risks involved at Gladstone. “Coal seam gas is actually very expensive to produce,” Raffan says. “You need to drill a lot of holes for one production well. I worry about how much the companies are spending on capital development.”

Woodside is the key stock for investors looking to participate in the LNG boom.

“It is very experienced,” Wiggins says. “Woodside has delivered LNG for 20 years. It has an incredible customer base and very meaningful volume growth coming out of Pluto. That is worth something. Clearly, with larger, experienced players who have been doing it for a long period of time, the risk is less than with some junior players who have not done this before.“

Oil and gas analyst at Hartleys, David Wall, says: “Woodside has built four LNG trains [processing lines] in Western Australia already and a fifth is 80 per cent complete. So that operational risk is largely mitigated.”

He also rates Oil Search highly. “Oil Search is working with ExxonMobil as operator and ExxonMobil has built a number of LNG trains globally. Quite a lot of technical risk is associated with the construction and operation of LNG plants and this can be reduced if you are with someone with experience.”

He says investors with an appetite for higher risk should consider companies that are exploring for gas near current LNG developments. Two of these, Tap Oil and Roc Oil, have active exploration programs in Western Australia.

Fat Prophets has a long-term buy recommendation on coal seam gas specialist Arrow Energy.

Large construction contracts are flowing from the LNG projects, with many more expected. A senior industrial analyst at Hartleys, Trent Barnett, recommends looking at the beneficiaries.

From these he recommends Mermaid Marine Australia, which has become Australia’s largest provider of marine services to the offshore oil and gas industry. “It is a very good business,” he says. “It is getting a lot of work out of Pluto and will get a lot more from Gorgon. It has a high exposure to LNG.”

He also recommends Decmil Group and Neptune Marine Services, which both provide a range of engineering services.