The Gas Forum 2024 organized by SKKMIGAS, get latest insights From Government, Gas Producers, Infrastructures and Transportation Operator, Buyers, End Users and Gas Analyst
The document provides highlights from recent energy outlooks published by IEA, OPEC, and EIA: - 2022 estimates from the agencies largely align but 2023 forecasts diverge more due to uncertainties. - By 2030, scenarios show energy demand rising 8-12% except in IEA's NZE scenario. Fossil fuels remain a large share of the mix. - By 2045, scenarios vary from a 15% decline to a 28% rise in primary energy demand. Fossil fuels remain above 50% in most scenarios. - Comparisons to other outlooks show a wide range of projections underscoring transition uncertainties and policy impact.
The document provides an overview and summary of the labour market outlook for Canada's oil and gas industry from 2016 to 2020. It notes that employment declined significantly in 2015 and further declines of 16,500 to 24,500 jobs are expected in 2016 as companies reduce spending. The outlook predicts the industry will start recovering in 2017, adding 28,000 to 36,200 new jobs by 2020, though attracting former and new workers may be challenging. Key occupations in demand include drilling workers, managers, and construction trades. The presentation also discusses potential LNG projects in Canada and their workforce requirements.
This document compares the 2022 baseline liquids data from the IEA, OPEC, and EIA. It finds that while the agencies are generally aligned on OECD demand estimates, non-OECD demand estimates diverge by up to 0.5 mb/d, primarily in the Middle East, Latin America, and non-OECD Asia. The document also notes some differences in how the agencies classify and report data that can impact comparability, such as the treatment of biofuels and refinery processing gains. Improving consistency and transparency in baseline data is important for enabling more robust comparisons of future energy outlooks.
The document summarizes key discussions from the 4th Annual Asia Pacific Small & Mid-Scale LNG Forum held in Singapore in 2015. It discusses how the Asia Pacific region is well-suited for small and mid-scale LNG developments given its diverse geography and energy needs. Specific topics covered include the impact of lower oil prices on LNG, challenges in unlocking stranded gas resources, Indonesia and the Philippines emerging as major small-scale LNG markets, and transport and power generation opportunities for small-scale LNG.
This document provides a draft table of contents for a report on trends and facts related to India's energy sector, including fossil fuels, power generation, transmission and distribution. The report covers topics such as coal demand and supply trends, thermal and renewable power generation capacities, natural gas demand and pricing, and challenges and opportunities in the upstream oil and gas sector. It aims to provide investors with logical and relevant information through analyses of historical data, identification of issues, and future forecasts for various industries through 2022. The table of contents outlines 16 sections that will be included in the report, such as sections on coal, oil and gas trends; thermal power installations by region; funding, technology and equipment trends; and fuel sourcing challenges and outlook
This document summarizes a research project on global gas security and governance led by Professor Mike Bradshaw of Warwick Business School. The project uses a supply chain approach to analyze gas security across upstream, midstream, and downstream areas. It also examines implications for the UK, which has become increasingly reliant on gas imports in recent decades. Key topics discussed include the UK's growing import dependence, the globalization of its gas security, and applying the supply chain framework to better understand challenges to UK gas security.
Liquified natural gas (LNG) has been a traded commodity for more than a century. But only in the last couple of decades has the market expanded to meet the ever-increasing demand for energy, through low carbon emissions energy sources. With the development of the massive Qatar LNG facilities in the mid-1990s and the increasing demand for imported gas, global LNG trading has grown from about 50 MTPA in 1990 to more than 350 MTPA in 2020. Most energy commodities struggled with lower trade and consumption volumes under the pandemic-induced industrial shutdowns in 2020. LNG trade was, however, up slightly at 0.4% during the year, continuing its uninterrupted streak of year-over-year growth since 1996. However, that growth was far below rates in the preceding years which averaged 7% since 2004.
The document discusses trends in the oil and gas market and natural gas/renewable energy forecasts through 2040. It then focuses on liquefied natural gas (LNG), describing what LNG is, its key applications, the state and forecast of the LNG industry, pricing, production economics, exports/imports by country, trade volumes, liquefaction plants/capacity by country/region, technologies, emerging markets, and transportation. The United States is projected to become a net exporter of LNG in 2016 and of natural gas overall in 2021 as increased domestic production and exports outweigh imports and domestic use.
Saudi Arabia's Sabic has received approval to export liquefied natural gas from the US to the UK. Sabic plans to invest in US shale gas and is converting a plant in England to process US shale gas. Kuwait's KNPC plans to invest $40 billion by 2022 on projects including a new refinery and clean fuels project. Global energy demand is projected to rise 37% by 2040, with growth concentrated in Asia, Africa, and Latin America rather than developed nations. GCC petrochemical revenues hit $89.4 billion in 2013, a 7.3% increase from 2012. Saudi Aramco plans to nearly double the capacity of a planned gas plant in Fadhili to 2.5