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LNG and Global Gas Infrastructure
LNG will become an increasingly important source of supply
to meet the world's demand for natural gas. High oil and gas
prices, world-scale infrastructure commitments and market
integration have conspired to globalize LNG on a grand scale
from what many considered a niche industry a few years ago.
Although there were only 12 LNG-exporting countries in 2004,
the number is increasing. Over the next seven years the industry
is expected to grow more than it did over the previous 40
years.
Regasification capacity additions are expected to outpace
new liquefaction capacity, reflecting the lower unit construction
cost of regasification relative to liquefaction and the increasing
value of optionality in the marketplace. The number of countries
installing the infrastructure necessary to accept LNG imports
is dramatically increasing.
The need for firm transport arrangements and the availability
of capital are expected to yield a robust LNG shipping/charter
market in the coming years. While such investments are thought
by some to be value-diluting on a one-off or stand-alone basis,
they will increasingly be seen as necessary to the execution
of supply-chain integration schemes. Qatar and Nigeria are
the most likely sources of new orders over the next few years.
Iran, North West Shelf, Peru and Angola are also expected
to be sources of new orders.
ZECG brings both broad and deep experience that spans the
entire LNG value chain. Capabilities include expertise in
feasibility, benchmarking, best practices, market structure,
logistics, engineering and design, project development, regulatory
affairs and government policy, construction, commissioning,
troubleshooting, debottlenecking, plant operations and fleet
management.
Integration of LNG receipts into the gas infrastructure involves
an understanding of existing coastal distribution and long-haul
pipeline systems, legal/regulatory/siting issues, environmental/safety
issues, gas interchangeability, basis differentials and seasonal
demand under myriad scenarios. Prudent planning requires linear
programming optimization of the pipeline grid, a specialty
that ZECG offers.
ZECG can identify optimal monetization and transportation
alternatives against relevant local, regional and global value
chain approaches, including CNG, pipeline, gas-by-wire, etc.,
and market analysis can establish pricing structure and contract
mechanisms and predict LNG's ability to penetrate (be absorbed
by) end-markets.
ZECG provides unbiased, expert advice to upstream, midstream
and downstream participants in the LNG trade.
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