-- Petronet LNG signs pact to import 4 million tons LNG a
year
-- Final agreement on imports is expected by end of 2013
-- Supply of LNG likely to start in 2017-18
(Adds analyst note, other background on LNG imports)
By Debiprasad Nayak and Eric Yep
MUMBAI--India's state-run Petronet LNG Ltd. (532522.BY) said
Thursday that it has signed a preliminary agreement with U.S.-based
United LNG LP to purchase around 4 million metric tons a year of
liquefied natural gas for 20 years.
India's natural gas importers are fast sealing deals to secure
supplies as demand far exceeds domestic output. The nation
currently produces about three-quarters of its natural-gas
requirements, but will need to import nearly half of its
requirements within a few years due to dwindling production.
Several gas-fired power plants are already shuttered or operating
below capacity due to a shortage of gas.
In a statement, Petronet LNG said it expects to finalize the
agreement by the end of this year. The supply of LNG could begin
sometime in 2017-18, R.K. Garg, Petronet LNG's director of finance,
told television channel CNBC TV18.
Buyers in Asia are looking to the U.S. to meet their increasing
energy requirements, as the shale revolution has left North America
with a huge surplus of gas and prices that are far below those in
Asia or Europe. LNG prices in Asia are often several times higher
than in the U.S. because of a regional supply deficit. Japan, the
world's biggest importer of LNG, pays about $18 per million British
thermal units, versus $4 in the U.S.
While the U.S. has a surplus of cheap gas now, rising import
demand from Asian countries is likely to raise hackles among some
U.S. industry groups and lawmakers who have recently been
advocating strict limits on energy exports to Asia citing potential
increases in domestic fuel prices.
Petronet LNG said United LNG would supply the super-cooled gas
through the Main Pass Energy Hub based off the Louisiana coast in
the southern U.S.
In 2011, GAIL (India) Ltd. (532155.BY), a state-run gas
processing and distribution company, signed a contract to buy
around 3.5 million tons of LNG annually for 20 years from Cheniere
Energy's (LNG) Sabine Pass facility in Louisiana.
A boost in LNG exports would have many positive effects on both
the U.S. and Indian economies, Nirupama Rao, India's ambassador to
the U.S., wrote in The Wall Street Journal earlier this month. "For
the U.S. it would help create thousands of jobs and an expanded
revenue stream for the federal government. For India, it would
provide a steady, reliable supply of clean energy that will help
reduce our crude oil imports from the Middle East and provide
reliable energy to a greater share of our population," she
wrote.
Write to Debiprasad Nayak at debi.nayak@dowjones.com and Eric
Yep at eric.yep@dowjones.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires