Australia is on track to surpass Qatar as the world’s largest LNG exporter, according to Australia’s Department of Industry, Innovation, and Science (DIIS). Australia already surpasses Qatar in LNG export capacity and exported more LNG than Qatar in November 2018 and April 2019. Within the next year, as Australia’s newly commissioned projects ramp up and operate at full capacity, EIA expects Australia to consistently export more LNG than Qatar.
LNG exports from selected countries (1/2013 -
5/2019)
Australia’s LNG export capacity increased from
2.6 Bcfd in 2011 to more than 11.4 Bcfd in 2019. Australia’s DIIS forecasts
that Australian LNG exports will grow to 10.8 Bcfd by 2020–21 once the recently
commissioned Wheatstone, Ichthys, and Prelude floating LNG (FLNG) projects ramp
up to full production. Prelude FLNG, a barge located offshore in northwestern
Australia, was the last of the eight new LNG export projects that came online
in Australia in 2012 through 2018 as part of a major LNG capacity buildout.
Starting in 2012, five LNG export projects
were developed in northwestern Australia: onshore projects Pluto, Gorgon,
Wheatstone, and Ichthys, and the offshore Prelude FLNG. The total LNG export
capacity in northwestern Australia is now 8.1 Bcfd. In eastern Australia, three
LNG export projects were completed in 2015 and 2016 on Curtis Island in
Queensland—Queensland Curtis, Gladstone, and Australia Pacific—with a combined
nameplate capacity of 3.4 Bcfd. All three projects in eastern Australia use
natural gas from coalbed methane as a feedstock to produce LNG.
Most of Australia’s LNG is exported under
long-term contracts to three countries: Japan, China, and South Korea. An
increasing share of Australia’s LNG exports in recent years has been sent to
China to serve its growing natural gas demand. The remaining volumes were
almost entirely exported to other countries in Asia, with occasional small
volumes exported to destinations outside of Asia.
For several years, Australia’s natural gas
markets in eastern states have been experiencing natural gas shortages and
increasing prices because coal-bed methane production at some LNG export
facilities in Queensland has not been meeting LNG export commitments. During
these shortfalls, project developers have been supplementing their own
production with natural gas purchased from the domestic market. The Australian
government implemented several initiatives to address domestic natural gas
production shortages in eastern states.
Several private companies proposed to develop
LNG import terminals in southeastern Australia. Of the five proposed LNG import
projects, Port Kembla LNG (proposed import capacity of 0.3 Bcfd) is in the most
advanced stage, having secured the necessary siting permits and an offtake
contract with Australian customers. If built, the Port Kembla project will use
the floating storage and regasification unit (FSRU) Höegh Galleon starting in
January 2021.