Big is back: Canada's mega LNG project gets green light on Asia demand

Reuters  |  VANCOUVER/SINGAPORE 

By and Jessica Jaganathan

The C$40 billion ($31 billion) LNG project led by was given the go-ahead by the Anglo-Dutch giant and its partners, making it the fuel's first major new project to win approval in recent years.

Construction will start immediately, with first shipments of the super-chilled fuel expected before 2025, aiming to feed surging demand from Asian buyers, primarily

"It seems that mega-projects are back," said Dulles Wang, director, gas at Wood Mackenzie, in an email note, adding that LNG is the biggest greenfield project to be approved globally since Russia's in 2013.

LNG from the project will reach in about half the time it takes from the U.S. Gulf Coast, said. Global LNG demand is expected to double by 2035, with much of that growth coming from where gas is displacing coal, it said.

At the same time, output from older projects is set to decline in coming years, just as soaring demand from China, and Southeast is devouring a supply glut previously expected to last for years, fanning fears that an LNG shortage may be looming.

"LNG Canada's FID would signal the appetite to invest in LNG is back," said Saul Kavonic, for markets and head of research at in

LNG Canada, to be built in the northern community of Kitimat, British Columbia, also marks the largest private-sector investment project in Canadian history, said at a conference.

The announcement provides a much-needed boost for Trudeau's ruling Liberals, who have struggled with an exodus of global firms from Alberta's as well as setbacks in building a crude pipeline expansion to Canada's

"We can't build like we did in the old days where the environment and the economy were seen as opposing forces," Trudeau said. "They must go together."

The project was approved by all its stakeholders - Shell, Malaysia's (Petronas) [PETR.UL], <601857.SS>, (KOGAS) <036460.KS> and Japan's <8058.T>.

"Getting an LNG project to a final investment decision is like a moon landing," Maarten Wetselaar, Shell's integrated gas and new energies director, said in "It is very, very difficult to do, and requires teamwork."

MEGA-PRICE

The project's C$40 billion price tag includes the export terminal, the associated pipeline, pre-construction and site work, contingency and upstream carrying costs.

Within that broader number, the cost of building the terminal has been pegged at $14 billion, with the running C$6.2 billion.

said it expects to start construction on the pipeline in early 2019, which will carry from the Montney of and to the facility.

The project owners will provide their own supply and will individually market their share of LNG.

LNG Canada's initial output will be 14 million tonnes per annum (Mtpa) from two trains, or processing units, with the option to add two more trains to expand to 28 Mtpa.

Canada has committed C$275 million to infrastructure and environmental performance measures related to LNG Canada, which will have the lowest carbon intensity of any large in the world, Trudeau said.

The project will boost Canada's oilpatch, which has struggled to attract investment amid pipeline constraints and investor malaise over a recent court decision overturning the approval of the pipeline expansion.

such as and stand to gain as Canada's rise, analysts said. Smaller pipeline companies including will also benefit, said

RISING APPETITE

The construction decision comes amid a U.S.-trade dispute that has led to tariffs being imposed by on LNG shipments from the United States, threatening U.S. Donald Trump's

China is the fastest-growing major buyer of LNG and in 2017 overtook to become the world's No. 2 importer, behind

Energy consultancy said it appeared project partners had pushed hard to reach an investment decision, with rival projects progressing in Qatar, Russia, and the

"I don't see it as a case of replacing U.S. cargoes, more about meeting projected demand growth," said

($1 = 1.2828 Canadian dollars; $1 = 113.6900 Japanese yen)

(Reporting by in Singapore and in Vancouver; additional reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Yuka Obayashi and Osamu Tsukimori in Tokyo, Jane Chung in and in Kuala Lumpur and John Benny in Bengaluru; editing by and Matthew Lewis)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, October 03 2018. 06:28 IST