Efforts to increase the number of China’s liquefied natural gas carriers will deepen the country’s ability to transport LNG independently and help its importers seal more long-term purchase deals, industry analysts said this week.
They commented after Japan’s Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd signed a long-term charter contract for three new LNG carriers with ENN LNG (Singapore) Pte Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of ENN Natural Gas Co Ltd, or ENN, a private energy company in China, last week, the Tokyo-headquartered MOL announced in a statement.
The vessels will be built by Shanghai-based Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding (Group) Co Ltd, a subsidiary of China State Shipbuilding Corp Ltd. These LNG tankers are scheduled to be delivered to the shipowner by 2028. The carriers will be engaged mainly in transport of LNG, procured by ENN under a long-term purchase contract, to China.
MOL offered more than $240 million but less than $250 million for each 174,000-cubic-meter LNG carriers, according to information released by eworldship.com, a Shanghai-based platform focusing on marine businesses.
Despite the high costs involved in building such vessels, China should build a fleet of LNG carriers to ensure its energy security and encourage State-owned, private and foreign companies to jointly invest in purchasing LNG tankers, said Yu Peng, an analyst at Beijing Petroleum Exchange.
“Owning LNG carriers can help domestic companies further mitigate the risks caused by international market fluctuations, and secure more long-term purchase deals,” he said.
China’s LNG imports are mainly based on the seller’s onshore delivery, and its orders’ transportation schedules are in the hands of global resource suppliers such as US LNG exporter Cheniere Energy LNG Inc, British energy group BP plc and QatarEnergy.
Compared with other major energy importing countries such as Germany, Japan and the Republic of Korea, the nation’s LNG transportation autonomy is relatively weak, said Wu Yugen, deputy director of the research center of oil and gas resources of the Ministry of Natural Resources.
Building LNG carriers requires technology more advanced than what is used to make conventional storage tanks. Such carriers should be able to store LNG at an extremely cold temperature and are mostly powered by steam turbines. Only a few countries, including China, the Republic of Korea and Japan are able to build such high-end carriers.
The size of the global LNG tanker fleet expanded from 642 ships by the end of 2020 to 700 by the end of 2021, according to information released by the Beijing-based China Association of the National Shipbuilding Industry.
Chinese energy and shipping companies, including China National Offshore Oil Corp, China National Petroleum Corp and China Merchants Energy Shipping Co Ltd, have placed more than 10 orders with leading domestic shipbuilders such as CSSC-Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Co Ltd and CSSC Jiangnan Shipyard (Group) Co Ltd, for new LNG carriers this year.
Soaring LNG prices and insufficient shipping capacity amid tight global energy supplies have caused China’s LNG imports to drop 20 percent year-on-year to 35.93 million metric tons in the first seven months of this year, while the value of its LNG imports surged by 45.5 percent year-on-year to $27.24 billion, data from the General Administration of Customs showed.
Russia, Australia, Malaysia, Qatar and the United States are China’s main LNG exporters.
China has increasingly shifted its energy sources from coal and oil to natural gas in response to growing awareness of the need for a low-carbon, decarbonized society. The country became the world’s largest LNG importer for the first time in 2021.
The nation’s LNG demand is expected to grow even more in the future, according to a report from the transport planning and research institute of the Ministry of Transport.
Source: Hellenic Shipping News