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India’s LNG-led gas market may grow over 6 times by 2030: Royal Dutch Shell

Shine Jacob  |  New Delhi  June 22, 2017 Last Updated at 15:47 IST

Global oil major says that India may see at least six times growth in by 2030 from the current levels. It adds that liquefied natural gas (LNG) may be the largest contributor to it. The prediction comes at a time when India is trying to increase the share of gas in the overall energy mix to over 15 per cent by 2030.
Currently, India is the fourth largest importer after Japan, Korea, and China, and has four terminals with close to 22 million metric tonne (mt) of re-gasification capacity per annum. “Based on current share of 7 per cent, may grow 2.5 per cent. If gas will contribute 15 per cent of energy basket as per the government target, it should grow six times. So, we are very positive about gas in India,” said Nitin Prasad, chairman, in India.
In its outlook report, the company said that demand growth from China, India and new entrants absorbed supply growth in 2016. The report said that while the global demand for gas is expected to increase by 2 per cent a year between 2015 and 2030, is set to rise over twice that rate at 4-5 per cent per year.

 

This comes at a time when the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas expects India’s import terminal capacity to double to 47.5 mt by 2022. “India imported almost 20 mt of in 2016-17. When we started with Hazira project in 2005, then this was zero and within a span of 12 years reaching more than 20 mt is an extraordinary growth,” said Shell Energy Asia Vice-President Ajay Shah, who is in charge of developing markets.

 

The company feels that demand shortage is a major roadblock to achieve this goal. Shell Gas B.V, a unit of Plc, owns a 74 per cent stake in Hazira There were plans to double Hazira LNG’s capacity to 10 mt, but the company is moving slowly because of the demand shortage. When asked about the delay in expansion plans of Hazira terminal, Prasad replied, “As far as Shell is concerned, we are in an advantageous position to increase the capacity when required. But the key is to see the demand in the country grow.”

 

The company said that to boost the market in India, the government should come up with a lighter policy with strong regulation and implementation.

 

Industry experts believe that lack of infrastructure is the major constraint for the absence in demand. India’s pipeline infrastructure stands at 16,240 km and an additional 10,258 km of pipelines are under construction. “Some terminals are in a bit of an issue. We have firstly a demand challenge, then we have a capacity and supply challenge. We need to take it in its sequence. The utilisation of existing pipelines is also about 40-50 per cent. The real question comes on how you actually build infrastructure around that pipeline,” Prasad said.

 

Though Shell had planned to float an terminal off the coast of Kakinada in tie up with and Engie, its progress is also slow because of the demand shortage. “We are involved in Kakinada. AP as a huge market, a lot of gas-fired power plants are idle there. Good that is you can access it even today through pipeline networks,” Shah said.

 

Echoing this, Prasad indicated that the planned special purpose vehicle by India to revive the stranded 14,000 megawatts of the power plant is set to bring in fresh life to the sector. “It will benefit everybody and the economics of the region will start improving as under utilised pipeline network will come into action,” he said.
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