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Asian Gas Troubles!
A book review by Nicholas Newman 24
June 2008
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Natural Gas in Asia: The Challenges of Growth in China,
India, Japan, and Korea. New Edition. OUP.
Edited by
Jonathan Stern Oxford Institute of
Energy Studies.
Contributors:
Michael
Bradshaw,
University of Leicester, Andy Flower, Consultant,
David Fridley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Sunjoy Joshi,
Indian Government, Najeeb Jung, Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, David Ledesma,
Consultant, Akira Miyamoto, Osaka Gas Co., Ltd, and Keun Wook-Paik,
OIES & Chatham House
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There are crucial issues and problems that face the Asian Natural Gas industry
today, which have been dangerously ignored by the West.
The rapid economic growth in economic development being experienced by the major
economies in Asia is creating new challenges for industry decision makers and
investors to solve.
The authors in this new edition of ‘Natural Gas in Asia: The Challenges of Growth
in China, India, Japan, and Korea’ seek to explain the factors hindering
development, examines possible solutions and the likely prospects for the
industry in Asia into the 2020s.
What are the issues, challenges and problems the Asian gas
industry faces?
This book outlines and analyses the problems and challenges that face the Asian
gas industry in a time of rapid economic development. Such growth is facing such
countries with problems meeting existing and future demand for gas from domestic
sources. In addition, added pressure for gas supplies is due to policy decisions
to switch from coal power, in order to improve the environment. For example,
such environmental concerns have been forced on Beijing in order to make the
local environment suitable for the 2008 Olympic participants.
Domestically, various governments are trying to reduce subsidies on gas prices,
despite stiff political opposition, in order to cut growth in demand. Other
states, including India, are encouraging the search and development of new
domestic gas fields and expansion of the existing gas pipeline networks.
In addition, some governments are seeking to import additional new supplies from
abroad, either via trans-border pipeline networks or Liquid Natural Gas (LNG)
tankers from gas fields elsewhere, including the Middle East, Australia and
Atlantic gas producing regions.
There have been long-term plans for over a decade to develop new pipelines to
link gas fields in Siberia with markets in Japan, China and South Korea. The
main obstacle to such plans has not been economic, but overcoming deep-rooted
historical political problems and energy security concerns that consuming
countries have with Russia.
Amongst, the primary problem that has hindered construction of new pipelines in
the region, is the inherent historic lack of trust between the countries
concerned.
In the case of China, construction of a new pipeline to Siberia has been delayed
for a variety of reasons. Beijing has energy security fears that it might become
too dependent on Russian energy. Also Russia's
Gazprom and China's
CNPC have
failed to resolve their differences over gas prices.
Similar failures to resolve past political issues are the main obstacle to Japan
being linked directly by pipeline in Siberia. The Kremlin and Tokyo have still
failed to normalize post Second World War political relations and resolve the
ongoing territorial disputes over the Kuril Islands. Also, the LNG option
enables Japan to shop around for its gas supplies and not be tied down to one
particular supplier, which would be the case if a pipeline was built linking
Japan with Siberia.
As for South Korea, current political tensions with its neighbour North Korea, put on
indefinite hold any likelihood of a direct pipeline to Siberia via North Korean
territory. Whilst more feasible proposals of a gas pipeline via China to Russia,
will only come to fruition, if and when, both the Kremlin and Beijing come to
there own deal about gas supplies.
However for India, the prospects of gaining access to Iranian gas supplies will
depend on Delhi gaining permission from Islamabad for permission to construct a
pipeline through its territory. In the past India has not enjoyed good
relationships with its neighbour Pakistan, also there is an ongoing territorial
dispute between the two countries.
At present proposals for such pipelines seem to be in a permanent state of
negotiations, with the prospect of construction never getting any closer.
Comparable projects elsewhere in the region have faced similar concerns, which
have so far failed to be resolved.
For the European reader of this book, it is reassuring that the EU is not the
only major purchaser of Russian gas having problems in dealings with Russia. In
fact both China and Japan have similar reservations about becoming too dependent
on Russian energy. Furthermore, Jonathan Stern the book’s editor makes the
telling observation that “there is no credible China or Asia ‘card’ that Russia
can play with European gas customers, by suggesting that current or future
supplies can be ‘switched to Asia.” Currently, there is not the gas
infrastructure in place to enable Russia to deliver gas in the same volumes as
it does to Europe. Jonathan Stern suggests it will be years, perhaps decades
before this is the case. In fact it is wrong to assume both the EU and Asia will
be supplied from the same gas fields. It makes more economic sense for Russia to
supply such markets from gas fields near to such markets in distinctly different
geographic locations, concludes Jonathan Stern.
Asian gas companies have realised that though construction of many of the
proposed trans-national pipelines is unlikely to be realised for some time. They
must seek an alternative, which are both economically and politically feasible.
LNG is the option that China, South Korea, India and Japan have opted for. They
are importing natural gas via LNG tankers from countries as far a field as the
Atlantic, Middle East and Australia. For many importing Asian countries,
Australia seems to be a very attractive option as a supplier, since it does not
have the political problems that are faced with dealing with Russia or Iran. In
Australia, the problem is how fast the Australian gas industry can take to
develop the giant natural gas fields it has discovered off its coasts, in often
difficult and remote locations. Though of more concern for Asian importers is
the increased competition for Australian gas from North America and Europe, who
are prepared to pay higher prices.
Conditions in the Asian gas markets have changed out of all recognition since
the first edition of this book came out in 2002 and will continue to change very
rapidly, making forecasts about the future of the Asian gas industry is very
difficult to predict.
Economic imperatives are beginning to bring a transformation in overcoming the
long standing political historical problems that face the countries in the
region, in the very same manner that the creation of the European Union has
transformed political and social relations in the EU?
Who is
this book for?
Unlike many an Oxford University Press publication of this standard, this book
is aimed at the key decision makers and investors concerned with the business of
the Asian natural gas industry. Business journalists will find this book an
invaluable aid for briefing on the issues and challenges that concern the gas
industry in the region.
Would I recommend this book?
This publication provides a vital tool that should be read by every decision
maker, professional commentator and investor concerned with the business of the
Asian natural gas industry. It is a well thought out readable analysis of the
situations in the Asian gas markets.
Rating 8/10
For Further Information
Oxford Institute for
Energy Studies
409 pages | May 2008 978-0-19-954141-6 |Hardback £45.00 inc. p&p ($90.00,
€60.00)
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