Renewables bill to shift California natgas outlook

  • Spanish Market: Natural gas
  • 07/09/18

Natural gas consumption faces an uncertain future in California pending the passage of legislation that requires the state to plan for 100pc of electricity to come from renewable or zero-carbon energy sources by the end of 2045.

If signed into law Senate Bill 100 (SB100), or the "100 Percent Clean Energy Act of 2018",will extend and expand policies previously established in the California Renewables Portfolio Standard (RPS). That program already requires sellers of electricity, such as publicly-owned utilities, to procure increasing amounts of renewable energy over time in order to displace fossil fuels.

The new legislation accelerates California's RPS program to reach 50pc renewables by 2025, and 60pc renewables by 2030. Beyond that time, California's electricity needs must be met by zero-carbon energy resources. In addition to renewables, this could include methods such as carbon capture and storage, or nuclear power.

The bill, which has already passed the California Assembly and Senate, is now on the desk of California governor Jerry Brown (D).

Currently, natural gas provides about one-third of California's electricity. California has 34,380MW of natural gas resources connected to its grid, although not all of that generation is in use at the same time, the California Independent System Operator told Argus.

Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) is likely to shut California's final remaining nuclear facility, Diablo Canyon, when operating licenses for its two units expire in 2024 and 2025.

BTU Analytics analyst Andrew Bradford told Argus the bill was "symbolic" as California's shift towards prioritizing renewable energy generation has been underway for some time.

New gas-fired power plant development in California has effectively halted. In June 2017, California regulators deferred plans to rebuild and modernize several plants in southern California so that an independent study could examine the possibility of renewable energy alternatives.

Members of a California Energy Commission committee in October 2017 also recommended the rejection of a proposal from NRG Energy to build the Puente Power Project, a gas-fired power plant in Ventura County.

In January, the California Public Utilities Commission ordered PG&E to solicit bids for clean energy resources to replace three natural gas-fired power plants in northern California. And in March, NRG Energy said that it will close three gas-fired power plants in southern California before the end of the year for economic reasons.

California consumes about 8 Bcf/d of natural gas, sourced from the Permian basin, the Rocky Mountains, and Canada. Only 1.1 Bcf/d is currently delivered to gas-fired power plants, or 14pc, Bradford said.

In comparison, the utility and industrial load has averaged about 6.9 Bcf/d so far in 2018, making up about 86pc of deliveries into California.

A demand loss of 14pc would likely result in smaller gas pipeline deliveries in California. Gas prices across the west would need to respond to adjust to the market to decrease supply to meet lower demand levels, Bradford said.

Natural gas is transported to California through several different pipelines, such as the El Paso Natural Gas and Transwestern pipelines, both of which obtain supply from the Permian and San Juan basins. Kern River Gas Transmission moves gas from the Opal hub in the Rocky Mountain production region into California, while Ruby pipeline transports gas from that same hub to the Malin hub on the California-Oregon border.

TransCanada's GTN pipeline also connects to the Malin hub, transporting gas south from the Canadian border and Foothills pipeline.

Matthew Hong, director of research, power and gas at Morningstar, told Argus the new legislation is "structurally bearish" for the natural gas market in California. But because the target date of 2045 is more than two decades away, it is too early to tell what the legislation will do to the gas industry and prices.

Hong said that the renewables legislation could increase the risk of higher electricity prices in California, but noted that over the past summer California also experienced "exceptionally high" gas pricing, which can also lead to higher electricity prices.

Gas prices soared this summer on hot weather conditions in southern California, ongoing pipeline maintenance and repairs in the region, and restricted use of the Aliso Canyon storage facility.

According to Hong, solar will likely play a significant role in making up for lost energy from natural gas, in addition to energy storage and wind generation.

California lawmakers will also likely be watching Hawaii, the first state of pass legislation to move to 100pc renewable energy. The state has a goal of 70pc by the end of 2040, and 100pc by the end of 2045.

Depending on how that transition progresses, California may slowly change its approach, based on lessons learned from Hawaii, Hong said.


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26/04/24

Azerbaijan wants certainty from EU on gas needs

Azerbaijan wants certainty from EU on gas needs

London, 26 April (Argus) — Azerbaijan needs long-term guarantees and available financial instruments to invest in gas production growth, its president Ilham Aliyev said earlier this week. Azerbaijan and the EU signed a strategic partnership agreement in 2022, in which Azerbaijan committed to increasing its supply to the EU to 20bn m³/yr by 2027 from 8bn m³ in 2021. This is a "target that we are moving towards" and exports to Europe will be around 12bn m³ this year, Aliyev said on 23 April at the Cop 29 and Green Vision for Azerbaijan forum ( see Azeri gas production graph ). But Azerbaijan needs investments to reach this export target, and restrictions from financing institutions on fossil fuel projects make them harder to realise, Alyiev said. The European Investment Bank has removed fossil fuel projects from its portfolio and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development has only a small share of such projects, Aliyev said. Corporations tend to finance 30pc of gas production or infrastructure projects on their own and the remainder through loans, he said. The other issue is a need to receive long-term guarantees for Azeri gas supply, as "Azerbaijan cannot invest billions only for 5-10 years and not be able to recover the costs", Aliyev said. Azerbaijan is still paying back loans for the Southern Gas Corridor and Shah Deniz Stage 2 projects, he said. A long-proposed Ionian-Adriatic pipeline that could provide the Balkan region with Azeri gas is yet to materialise because it lacks EU funding support and gas consumption in the countries involved is low, particularly considering the challenges involved with building a pipeline in a mountainous region, Aliyev said. But Azeri gas can already reach Croatia, Bosnia Herzegovina and Montenegro through Hungary, while it can flow to Serbia through Bulgaria, he said. Aliyev said he believes that the Croatian and Azeri governments are already in consultation about this. Referring to a long-mooted project to build a pipeline across the Caspian Sea to deliver Turkmen gas to Europe, Aliyev said that Azerbaijan has "received no messages from Turkmenistan". Azerbaijan as a transit country cannot become the initiator or co-ordinator of a trans-Caspian pipeline project, Aliyev said. The Southern Gas Corridor is fully booked, meaning that infrastructure developments are needed to transport more gas to Europe, which is "under discussion", Aliyev said. Azerbaijan plans renewables build-out Azerbaijan is targeting 5GW of additional renewable generation capacity, which it aims to substitute for gas, releasing this supply for export to Europe, Aliyev said. Azerbaijan's first 240MW solar plant was inaugurated in 2023. It plans to add four new 1.3GW solar and wind projects this year and is considering some offshore and onshore wind projects as well as solar and hydropower plants. Azeri gas consumption for power generation and heating needs increased to 6.6bn m³ in 2022 from 6.1bn m³ in 2020, and made up almost half of domestic consumption in 2022 ( see data and download ). Azerbaijan is in the last phase of a feasibility study for a green energy cable from the Caspian Sea to the Black Sea and then further down to Europe. The project aims to initially connect the Georgian Black Sea to the Romanian coast, and plans to expand it further down to the eastern Caspian and Kazakhstan, according to Aliyev. The state plans to keep investing to strengthen the energy grid to allow it to cope with the renewables build-out. Foreign investors are mainly involved with renewables projects. Oil and gas makes up less than half of Azerbaijan's GDP today, but 95pc of its exports, Aliyev said. By Victoria Dovgal Azeri gas production bn m³ Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus


26/04/24
26/04/24

US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus

New York, 26 April (Argus) — US oil and gas sector mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are likely to slow for the rest of the year following a record $51bn in deals in the first quarter, consultancy Enverus says. Following an unprecedented $192bn of upstream deals last year, the Permian shale basin continued to dominate first-quarter M&A as firms competed for the remaining high-quality inventory on offer. Acquisitions were led by Diamondback Energy's $26bn takeover of Endeavor Energy Resources. Other private operators, such as Mewbourne Oil and Fasken Oil & Ranch, would be highly sought after if they decided to put themselves up for sale, Enverus says. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q


26/04/24
26/04/24

Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q

London, 26 April (Argus) — TotalEnergies said it expects its oil and gas production to hold broadly steady in the second quarter as planned maintenance is partially offset by rising output from new projects in Brazil and Denmark. The company expects to average 2.4mn-2.45mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d) in April-June, compared with 2.46mn boe/d in the previous three months and 2.47mn boe/d in the second quarter of 2023. Production is being supported by the restart of gas output from the redeveloped Tyra hub in Denmark late last month and the start of the 180,000 b/d second development phase of the Mero oil field on the Libra block in Brazil's Santos Basin at the beginning of the year. TotalEnergies first-quarter output was flat compared with the previous three months but 2pc lower than a year earlier as a result of Canadian oil sands divestments. The company reported a robust set of first-quarter results today, broadly in line with analysts' expectations. Profit for the first three months of 2024 was $5.7bn, compared to $5.6bn in the same period last year. Adjusted profit — which takes into account inventory valuation effects and special items — came in at $5.1bn, down by 22pc on the year but slightly ahead of the consensus of analysts' estimates of $5bn. Adjusted operating profit from the firm's Exploration & Production business was down by 4pc year-on-year at $2.55bn, driven in part by lower natural gas prices. The Canadian oil sands asset sales weighed on the segment's production but this was partly compensated by start-ups. As well as Mero 2, the Akpo West oil project in Nigeria started production during the first quarter. TotalEnergies' Integrated LNG segment saw a 41pc year-on-year decline in its adjusted operating profit to $1.22bn in January-March. The company said this reflects lower LNG prices and sales. But while its LNG sales for the quarter fell by 3pc in year-on-year terms, its LNG production was greater by 6pc. TotalEnergies achieved an average $78.9/bl for its liquids sales in the first quarter, an improvement on $73.4/bl a year earlier. But the average price achieved for its gas sales was 43pc lower on the year at $5.11/mn Btu. In the downstream, the company's Refining & Chemicals segment's first-quarter adjusted operating profit was $962mn in January-March, down by 41pc on the year but 52pc higher than the preceding quarter. TotalEnergies attributes the quarter-on-quarter rise to higher refining margins and a rise in refinery throughput . For the second quarter, it expects refinery utilisation rates to be above 85pc, compared with 79pc in the first quarter, boosted by the restart of 219,000 b/d Donges refinery in France. Total's Integrated Power segment continued to improve, registering a quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year increased of 16pc and 65pc respectively in its adjusted operating profit to €611mn. Net power production increased 14pc year-on-year to 9.6 TWh, while the company's portfolio of installed power generation capacity grew 54pc to 19.5GW. Total's cash flow from operations, excluding working capital, was down by 15pc on a year earlier at $8.2bn in the first quarter. The company has decided to raise its dividend for 2024 by 7pc to €0.79/share and plans a $2bn programme of share buybacks for the second quarter. By Jon Mainwaring Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japanese gas utilities to sell more city gas in 2024-25


26/04/24
26/04/24

Japanese gas utilities to sell more city gas in 2024-25

Osaka, 26 April (Argus) — Japanese gas utilities are expecting city gas demand from their customers to rebound in the April 2024-March 2025 fiscal year, after warmer than normal weather reduced the use of the heating fuel in 2023-24. Japan's largest gas retailer by sales Tokyo Gas forecast on 25 April that its city gas sales will increase to 11.422bn m³ for 2024-25, up by 1.1pc from a year earlier. Sales to the household sector are predicted to grow by 3.4pc to 2.8bn m³, after unusually warm weather during the summer and winter of 2023-24. Supplies to the industry and commercial users are also anticipated to edge up by 0.3pc to 8.6bn m³ during the period. The optimistic outlook came after a 10.1pc year-on-year fall in city gas sales for 2023-24. Tokyo Gas sold around 2.7bn m³ of city gas, down by 2.8pc from a year earlier, to the household sector to meet weaker weather-driven demand. Sales to the industry sector plunged by 20.1pc to 4.7bn m³ because of slower operations at their customers, while wholesale sales dropped by 3.2pc to 1.56bn m³. The falls more than offset a 2.3pc rise to 2.3bn m³ in the commercial sector where hotter than normal summer weather boosted city gas demand for cooling purposes. Tokyo Gas forecast temperatures in its service area to average 16.4°C in 2024-25, down from the previous year's 17.5°C. Fellow gas retailer Toho Gas forecast its city gas sales to increase by 1.2pc from the previous year to 3.4bn m³ in 2024-25, with supplies to residential users rising by 5.6pc to 595mn m³ and sales to the industry and commercial sectors edging up by 0.3pc to 2.8bn m³. The company sold 3.37bn m³ of city gas in 2023-24, down by 2.4pc from a year earlier, pressured by the warmer weather. City gas sales by Saibu Gas are expected to rise by 2.3pc from a year earlier to 940mn m³ in 2024-25. The company expanded sales by 3pc to 919mn m³ in 2023-24. Possible increased city gas sales in 2024-25 would increase demand for its main feedstock of LNG. But the 2024-25 sales forecast by Tokyo Gas and Toho Gas would remain lower compared with their 2022-23 sales. Japan's city gas production in 2022-23 totalled 35bn m³, which required 25.5mn t of LNG, according to trade and industry ministry data. By Motoko Hasegawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

LNG Energy eyes sanctions-hit Venezuela oil blocks


25/04/24
25/04/24

LNG Energy eyes sanctions-hit Venezuela oil blocks

Caracas, 25 April (Argus) — A Canadian firm plans to revive two onshore oil blocks in Venezuela, but the conditional deals signed with struggling state-owned PdV come just as the US is reinstating broad sanctions on the South American country. LNG Energy Group's Venezuela unit agreed two deals with PdV to boost output in five fields in the Nipa-Nardo-Niebla and Budare-Elotes blocks, which produce about 3,000 b/d of light- to medium-grade crude, the company said on Wednesday. The Canadian company, which operates in neighboring Colombia, would receive 50-56pc of production of the blocks. Venezuela's oil ministry declined to comment. But finalizing the contracts depends on providing required investment to develop the fields within 120 days of the contract signing on 17 April, LNG Energy said. And the signing came on the same day as the US reimposed oil sanctions on Venezuela and gave most companies until 31 May to wind down business. LNG Energy Group said it intends to comply with existing and upcoming US sanctions, noting that the conditional contracts were executed within the terms of the temporary lifting of sanctions — general license 44 — but it will abide by the new license 44A. The reimposition of US sanctions on Venezuela prohibits new investment in the country's energy sector, at the threat of US criminal and economic penalties. "The company will assess in the coming days the applicability of license 44A to its intended operations in Venezuela and determine the most appropriate course of action," LNG Energy said. "The company intends to operate in full compliance with the applicable sanctions regimes." The two blocks are in the adjacent Anzoategui and Monagas states, part of the Orinoco extra heavy oil belt. Most of Venezuela's output is medium- to heavy-grade crude. Both PdV and Chevron have drilling rigs working in those two states, in separate workover and drilling campaigns. Venezuela is now producing above 800,000 b/d, after the US allowed Chevron to increase production and investment under separate waivers. By Carlos Camacho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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