The Great Australian Gas Scam By James Reed

"Aussies Can Thank Qatar for Lower Energy bills," by David Llewelyn-Smith, at our go-to economic critical blog, Macrobusiness.com.au, is an ironic piece commenting on the depressing paradox that gas prices in Asia and Europe are about 20 percent lower than in Australia. Oh, so that must be cheap Russian gas, at least from pipes not blown up? No, it is Australian gas, our gas, and we Aussies pay more than the rest of the world getting our own gas! As detailed in the hard-hitting piece below, this is because of the gas cartels, and the fact the government does not deal with the matter. Thus, given this situation Llewelyn-Smith looks forward to the gas expansion by Qatar that will increase the global supply of gas, forcing the price down, and thus, by a flow-on effect, lowering gas prices in Australia, and hopefully ending crippling electricity prices.

What needs to be done is to address the fundamental absurdity that a gas-producing nation does not supply cheap gas to its people. It is the economics of insanity.

https://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2024/02/aussies-can-thank-qatar-for-lower-energy-bills/

"As the global gas price crash proceeds everywhere but Australia, locals should take a moment to thank Qatar for stepping in where their own government is too cowardly to tread.

As we know, gas prices in Asia and Europe are about 20% lower than in Australia.

That is, for Australian gas. Say what?

This is thanks to the East Coast Gas cartel, which ships untold volumes of supercheap local gas into these markets while squeezing the Aussie market.

Albo's cowards are, as usual, too scared or corrupt to prevent it, most notably Resources Minister Madeleine King, whose relationship with the gas cartel is more like a puppet than a regulator.

But Qatar is coming to the rescue. It is undertaking an immense gas supply expansion to ensure global prices go lower for longer. Goldman:

QatarEnergy's announcement today (Sunday) of further LNG export capacity expansion will likely extend the bearish cycle we expect in global LNG markets for most of the second half of this decade.

The announced two 8 mtpa trains come on top of Qatar's 48 mtpa capacity expansion currently under construction, targeted to take the country's total LNG export capacity from 77 mtpa currently to 142 mtpa by 2030.

Combined with LNG export capacity currently under construction in the US and other regions, we expect more than 200 mtpa of added global LNG supply capacity before the end of this decade, approximately 50% of the 409 mtpa global LNG supply observed in 2023.

For context, annual Asia LNG import growth has averaged 18 mtpa for the past several years – and that's excluding the weaker 2022 (China lock down) and 2020 (global pandemic) years.

The resulting LNG oversupply will in our view lead to increasing risks, especially from 2026, when we expect the Qatari expansion to start to come online, that global gas prices decline to supply cash costs (below ~$4.70/mmBtu or ~15 EUR/MWh), potentially leading to the cancellation of US LNG exports, much like in 2020.

While it may seem counterintuitive for Qatar to announce further export capacity expansions in a (soon to be) oversupplied market, we believe the region, which is the lowest-cost LNG supplier in the world, can benefit from increased long-term market share while conveying the image of a reliable supplier, especially in light of the recently announced pause in US LNG export project approvals.

Bravo Qatar. Such global prices will eventually seep into the Australian consciousness via the ACCC and force the local gas price lower.

Because gas sets the marginal cost of electricity, Qatar will, in turn, crash these bills for Aussies in due course.

Aussies should perhaps pause to wonder why it is that a distant and tiny Islamic tyranny cares more about their quality of life than their own government.

And how a resource superpower allowed East Coast gas exports without applying a domestic reservation policy (another corporate wrecking job by the Grattan Institute).

https://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2023/09/grattan-institute-destroys-australian-energy/

 

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Wednesday, 15 May 2024

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