Iran Burns Gas as Sanctions Halt Trade
Iran will lead a club of the
world’s biggest natural gas exporters as its own shipments abroad are hampered
by U.S. and European Union sanctions that force the country to burn off
billions of dollars worth of the fuel.
Mohammad Hossein
Adeli, the country’s former deputy foreign minister,
was elected secretary-general of the Gas Exporting Countries Forum, whose 13
member countries hold 60 percent of the world’s
reserves, the group said on 3 November in a statement. Adeli,
who will replace Leonid Bokhanovsky of Russia next
year, vowed to turn the Persian nation into a “major player among the gas
exporting countries,” he told reporters after a group meeting in Tehran.
U.S. and EU trade sanctions
over Iran’s nuclear program have cut the Persian nation’s crude exports, its
largest revenue source, by half since 2011 and are stifling projects to export
some of its gas reserves, the world’s largest. Iran is one of three GECF
members that are net importers as the group faces increased competition from
liquefied natural gas projects from the U.S. to Australia.
The vote is “a signal that
attitudes toward Iran perhaps are thawing, and tension easing, since they were
elected to represent this group on the international stage,” Tom James, a
Dubai-based managing director of Navitas Resources
Ltd., an energy and commodity markets adviser, said on 3 November by e-mail.
Bank Governor
Adeli was fired as deputy foreign
minister in 2005 by then President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Prior to that, he
served as ambassador to Canada and the U.K. and was Iran’s central bank
governor. He holds a Ph.D. in business administration from California Coast
University, according to the website of the Global Policy Journal. He is
founder of the Ravand Institute for Economic and
International Studies, which promotes “global dialog and consensus-building,”
according to its website.
The country nominated Adeli because he is “accustomed to moving in high places to
accelerate Iran’s development of Iran’s most abundant export resource, one that
will generate significant foreign exchange for them,” Zach Allen, president of PanEurasian Enterprises Ltd., a Raleigh, North
Carolina-based tracker of LNG shipments, said Oct. 30 by e-mail.
Iran burned off 11.4 billion
cubic meters (400 billion cubic feet) of gas in 2011, the last year for which
data is available, according to the World Bank’s Global Gas Flaring Reduction
Public-Private Partnership. That would meet about a quarter of demand in South
Korea, the world’s biggest buyer of LNG after Japan. The gas is worth about
$7.3 billion on Asian spot LNG markets. Iran burns off the gas produced
alongside oil because it lacks the infrastructure to process and transport it
to markets.
LNG Prices
LNG prices in northeast Asia
rose to $17.50 per million British thermal units in the week ended Oct. 28, the
highest since Feb. 25, according to World Gas Intelligence assessments of
cargoes for delivery in four to eight weeks.
Iran’s reserves “must give
them an interest in what happens with the price of gas longer term,” said Neil Beveridge, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Sanford C.
Bernstein. “They have the most at stake here after Russia in terms of what
happens to the industry.”
Iran is scheduled to hold
talks over its nuclear program with the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Russia and
China on Nov. 7-8 in Geneva in hopes of reaching an agreement that loosens
sanctions. Iran is willing to assent to more stringent inspections as part of
confidence-building measures intended to defuse a decade-long standoff over its
nuclear program, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi
said last month.
‘Essentially Absent’
The country, the world’s
third-largest gas producer, is a net importer of the fuel, according to BP Plc’s Statistical Review, which last year rated its
reserves above Russia’s in a move denounced by Gazprom, the world’s biggest
exporter.
“Iran is essentially absent
from the regional and global markets,” Navitas’James
said Oct. 30 by e-mail. “Iran could easily aim for a 10 percent
share of global gas trade.”
The sanctions have hampered
development of Iran’s South Pars, an extension of Qatar’s North Field that make
it the world’s largest gas reservoir, and drove away international energy
companies.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Repsol SA and Total SA
abandoned plans for LNG in Iran, depriving it of the buyers, money and
expertise needed to make and sell the fuel, which is chilled to minus 162
degrees Celsius (minus 260 Fahrenheit) to shrink it to 1/600th of its original
size for transport by tankers.
Iran LNG
The Persian LNG project, from
which Shell and Repsol withdrew in 2010, had an
annual capacity of 16.2 million metric tons, or about 5 percent
of the world’s current capacity. The Pars LNG site abandoned by Total in 2009
had a planned capacity of 10 million tons. That compares with 61.2 million tons
under construction in Australia and 39.55 million tons of U.S. projects that
have signed off-take agreements or are being built.
“We will try to cooperate with
other exporters that are not a member of this forum as it is beneficial for all
of us,” Adeli said. “I’m hopeful that.”
Of the four LNG projects Iran
originally envisioned, it’s pushing ahead with one, a 10.5 million-ton-a-year
facility known as Iran LNG, at Tombak near the Gulf
port of Assaluyeh. The government is working alone on
the $3.3 billion project after suspending a contract with its Chinese partner, Mehr news agency reported in September last year.
The relaxation of sanctions
would encourage international oil companies to reactivate Iranian LNG projects,
Robin Mills, head of consulting at Manaar Energy
Consulting and Project Management in Dubai, said in an Oct. 29 phone interview.
Adeli may improve Iran’s access to
governments and global industry leaders, Allen said. “The opportunities there
are enormous for both Iran and foreign investors.”
Nationalizing Assets
Shell complies with sanctions
on Iran, Sarah Bradley, a company spokeswoman in London, said by e-mail. Kristian Rix, a Repsol spokesman in Madrid, declined to comment. Total
didn’t return an e-mail seeking comment.
The GECF member states are
Algeria, Bolivia, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Iran, Libya, Nigeria, Oman, Qatar,
Russia, Trinidad and Tobago, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela.