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Nuvista Energy Ltd T.NVA

Alternate Symbol(s):  NUVSF

NuVista Energy Ltd. is an oil and natural gas company. The Company is engaged in the development, delineation and production of condensate, natural gas liquids (NGLs), and natural gas reserves in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. Its focus is on the scalable and repeatable condensate rich Montney formation in the Pipestone and Wapiti areas of the Alberta Deep Basin (Montney). Its core operating areas of Wapiti and Pipestone in the Montney formation are located near the City of Grande Prairie, Alberta, approximately 600 kilometers northwest of Calgary. The Montney Formation is a shale gas and shale oil resource. The Montney formation in the Wapiti area is a thick (200 m+) section of hydrocarbon-charted fine-grained reservoir found at depths ranging from 2,500-3,500 m. It has non-core operations in three additional areas of Alberta (non-core properties outside the greater Wapiti Montney area).


TSX:NVA - Post by User

Post by Carjackon Dec 19, 2024 12:26pm
50 Views
Post# 36370519

U.S. keeps its LNG exports crown even as luster fades

U.S. keeps its LNG exports crown even as luster fades

U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports are on track to climb to new highs in 2024, as record domestic natural gas production spurred the 10th straight year of volume growth in the lucrative LNG export sector.

U.S. LNG shipments for 2024 look set to hit 86.9 MM tonnes (t), according to ship-tracking data from Kpler.

That total is around 720,000 t or 0.8% more than in 2023, and so sustains the expansion trend of U.S. LNG exports despite brief outages at a number of export terminals in 2024 and delays at new projects that are under construction.

Bumpy ride. Despite the volume growth, it hasn't been an easy year for the U.S. LNG export sector, which became the world's largest last year.

Record gas output at home combined with slowing gas demand in key markets resulted in a roughly 21% fall in average U.S. LNG export prices so far this year compared to 2023, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).

From January through September, LNG export prices averaged $6.15 per thousand cubic feet, according to the EIA.

That compares to a $7.75 average over the same period in 2023 and a $12.20 average in 2022, which was when Russia's invasion of Ukraine triggered power sector turmoil and a sharp rise in LNG imports across Europe.

This year's fall in U.S. LNG export prices was greater than the roughly 15% decline over the same period in Henry Hub natural gas futures - the U.S. benchmark gas price - and so helped squeeze LNG exporter revenues through much of 2024.

Market movers. A 22% drop in purchases by top market Europe from 2023's levels also hurt U.S. LNG exporters by forcing them to find other buyers, often in more distant and dispersed locations that take longer and cost more to service.

For 2024 as a whole, Europe is on track to purchase 43.8 MMt of LNG from the U.S., which is 12.7 MMt less than European buyers purchased in 2023 and the lowest full-year total since 2021, according to Kpler.

To offset the lower orders from Europe, U.S. exporters had to dial up sales to Asia, where volumes climbed by 8 MMt on the year to 31.6 MMt this year.

But shifting those volumes to buyers in Japan, South Korea, India and China costs more than the equivalent cargo loads to Europe due to the far longer journey times.

The trip duration from Sabine Pass LNG export terminal in the U.S. Gulf to Sodegaura LNG import terminal in Japan is roughly 30 days - twice as long as the trip to Rotterdam port in the Netherlands, which is Europe's main gas hub.

Longer journey times means higher freight costs as well more boil-off of the gas from storage tanks, which results in lower volumes that can be discharged upon delivery.

Price trends. Rising global natural gas prices look set to boost earnings for gas sellers heading into 2025, and should see LNG exporter earnings pick up in the months ahead.

Forward gas prices in the TTF gas trading hub in the Netherlands are currently projected to climb by nearly 12% in 2025 from the 2024 average, while Henry Hub futures are seen climbing by 32% from their 2024 average, according to LSEG.

However, higher gas costs may also serve to undermine the appetite for LNG in cost-sensitive economies where coal and other power sources are cheaper and more abundant.

Combined LNG purchases by India, Pakistan and Bangladesh are on course to hit a record of nearly 40 MMt in 2024, according to Kpler.

But power producers in those countries rank among the most cost-sensitive in Asia, and are well versed in switching out gas for other fuels when price moves or other market forces dictate.

In 2022, when global LNG and gas prices soared in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, combined purchases into South Asia dropped by 16%, or 6 MMt, from the year before as gas buyers balked at the high gas costs.

In 2025, gas buyers in that region could again make a retreat from world markets if prices climb to uneconomical levels and justify the use of coal or other fuels instead.

Even in wealthier Europe, gas buyers may also slow purchases if local industrial activity remains muted, or if renewables and other clean energy sources boost supplies enough to displace fossil fuel output.

This level of LNG demand uncertainty means further growth in overall LNG export volumes is not guaranteed in 2025.

The opinions expressed here are those of Gavin Maguire, a market analyst for Reuters.

 
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