S.Korea LNG Imports Set to Ease from Record

By Jane Chung
Friday, July 20, 2018

South Korean imports of liquefied natural gas are set to ease from record levels racked up in the first-half of the year, with appetite for the fuel from utilities seen fading as a raft of nuclear power stations come back online.

The country's imports of the commodity jumped nearly 16 percent year-on-year to a record 22.7 million tonnes in the first six months of 2018, according to customs data in mid-July, boosted by demand from power firms as around half the nation's 24 nuclear plants were shut for maintenance.

But with an average of only six reactors expected to be offline over the rest of the year, analysts say shipments of LNG into the world's No.3 importer of the fuel are likely to decline.

"(LNG) demand in the second-half won't be as strong as in the first-half because nuclear run rates will rise," said Yang Ji-hae, an analyst at Samsung Securities.

South Korea mainly consumes natural gas for heating and cooking, although it has been pushing to use the fuel more in power generation as it looks to switch away from coal and nuclear.

Gas power generation made up 29.1 percent of the country's overall electricity output in January-May, up from 20.4 percent last year, according to Reuters calculations based on data from Korea Electric Power Corp. That compares to the share of nuclear power at 20.8 percent, down from typical levels of around 30 percent.

State-run Korea Gas Corp (KOGAS) sold 19.7 million tonnes of gas in the January-June period, up 18.5 percent from last year, data from the country's sole wholesaler shows. For power generation, 8.7 million tonnes of gas were sold during that period, up almost 31 percent on-year.

Looking to Winter
Nicholas Browne, senior gas analyst at energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie, said that full-year 2018 LNG imports were expected to be similar to last year, with South Korean buyers already storing gas ahead of winter.

"They are ... filling storage in the traditional shoulder months, even if current spot prices are relatively high at $10/mmBtu. It likely means that KOGAS anticipates prices will head higher in the winter," Browne said.

LNG spot prices have averaged $10.03 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) so far this July, up from $5.59 per mmBtu in the same month last year.

South Korea imported 37.6 million tonnes of LNG in 2017, customs data showed. KOGAS brings in around 32 million tonnes of LNG a year, with the rest purchased by private gas companies and utilities.

Yang at Samsung Securities said demand for gas from the power sector would drop in the second-half, although she added that gas would "benefit from the country's energy policy in the mid-to-long term".

(Reporting by Jane Chung; Additional reporting by Joori Roh and Jesssica Jagnathan; Editing by Joseph Radford)

Categories: Tankers Energy Finance LNG Seawork

Related Stories

Inpex’s Ichthys LNG Strike Persists as Fair Work Hearing Gets Postponed

TGS Books 3D Streamer Seismic Job in Africa and Middle East region

Hormuz Reopening Could Trigger OPEC’s Next Big Challenge

SBM Offshore to Sell 45% Stake in Mexico-Bound FSO to NYK

Ichthys LNG Strike Causes Delay to Taiwan-Bound Cargo

Mitsui Eyes New LNG Investments to Power Data Center Growth

Petronas Signs 20-year Charter Deal with MISC for Five LNG Carrier Newbuilds

Iraq, Pakistan Secure Oil Shipments via Hormuz with Iran Agreements

ADNOC Drilling Posts Record First-Quarter Results with 5% Revenue Rise

CNOOC’s First Quarter Profit Rises on Higher Oil Prices, Output

Current News

JERA Takes Delivery of First LNG Cargo from Australia's Barossa Gas Project

Inpex’s Ichthys LNG Strike Persists as Fair Work Hearing Gets Postponed

Oil Falls More Than 2% as US-Iran Tensions Ease

TGS Books 3D Streamer Seismic Job in Africa and Middle East region

Hormuz Reopening Could Trigger OPEC’s Next Big Challenge

EnQuest to Buy Malaysia Offshore Interests in $833M Deal

Oil Holds Steady as Markets Assess Renewed US-Iran Hostilities

ADNOC Looks to Canada for Upstream and LNG Growth Through XRG

Petronas Signs 20-Year LNG Supply Deal with Japan's JERA

Oil Prices Slide as Israel-Iran Suspend Strikes

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com