LNG discount to methanol renews LNG bunker interest

  • : Biofuels, Natural gas, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 23/04/04

The premium for LNG compared with grey methanol flipped to a discount in February and maintained it through March, a shift that could restore ship owners' interest in LNG for bunkering fuel.

Some ship owners that had been considering LNG for bunkering shifted their sights to methanol last year after LNG prices soared while grey methanol prices did not have as dramatic an upswing. LNG prices in northwest Europe, Asia-Pacific and the US Gulf coast spiked over $2,100/t very low-sulphur fuel oil equivalent (VLSFOe) in August 2022 as uncertainty around Russian winter natural gas exports to Europe intensified. By comparison, grey methanol last year peaked in March at $1,002/t in Asia-Pacific and below $962/t in northwest Europe and the US Gulf coast.

As the 2022/2023 winter season wound down, European natural gas stockpiles remained high. As a result, LNG prices in northwest Europe, Asia-Pacific and the US Gulf coast fell to under $601/t VLSFOe in March, compared with over $720/t VLSFOe for grey methanol in these regions.

Even though LNG and grey methanol are both sourced from fossil feedstock, their CO2 emissions differ. LNG emissions from combustion and full lifecycle are about 21pc and 28pc lower, respectively, compared with emissions from conventional marine fuels. Grey methanol combustion lowers CO2 emissions by only 7pc compared with conventional marine fuels and grey methanol full lifecycle emissions are higher than conventional bunkers. Despite the higher LNG price volatility, LNG provides ship owners with higher CO2 reduction than grey methanol. Methanol also has lower energy content per volume than LNG, and requires fuel tanks approximately 1.3 times larger than equivalent LNG tanks. A vessel owner interested in methanol could opt out of a smaller tank in exchange for shorter voyages.

But, in addition to lower price volatility, methanol has other advantages. It is a liquid fuel at ambient temperatures, which makes it easier to store and handle on board of a vessel compared with LNG, which has to be maintained at least below -177°F to remain liquid. As a result, methanol's operational costs are lower. Methanol is also biodegradable if spilled into water, while an LNG leak could be flammable and explosive. A newbuild vessel with LNG-burning engine costs about 22pc more to build than conventional marine fuel-burning vessel, while an methanol-burning vessel costs about 10pc more to build. Building a methanol bunkering terminal is cheaper than an LNG terminal.

The typical life of a dry bulk carrier, tanker or container ship is about 25 years. A vessel built this year, would end its service by about 2048. When commissioning a vessel with over 5,000 gross tonnage, ship owners travelling the EU territorial waters should consider a requirement considered by the EU to decrease the greenhouse gas intensity of marine fuels by at least 2pc from 2025, 6pc from 2030, 14.5pc from 2035, 31pc from 2040, 62pc as of 2045, and 80pc by 2050, from a 2020 baseline. The EU also agreed to include maritime shipping in its emissions trading system (ETS). Ships will have to pay for 40pc of their emissions from 2024, 70pc from 2025, and 100pc from 2026.

Bio-LNG is fully interchangeable with LNG derived from fossil feedstock. Similarly, bio-methanol is fully interchangeable with grey methanol. Bio-LNG and bio-methanol could be carbon natural, if produced from sustainable biomass. Ship owners who opt to build LNG-burning vessels could burn a blend of bio-LNG with LNG to meet EU's fuel intensity rule and keep their ETS costs down. Ship owners who opt for methanol-burning vessels could burn a blend of bio-methanol with grey methanol. Global production of both bio-LNG and bio-methanol requires scaling up to meet marine fuel demand. Ship owners who choose methanol would have lower vessel building and operational costs. This is countered by the LNG-grey methanol price discount, when LNG-burning vessels owners would see immediate CO2 emissions reductions at lower price.

To hedge their bio-fuel costs and ensure availabilities, ship owners are inquiring about long-term bio-LNG or bio-methanol offtake agreements, looking into partnering with fuel suppliers, or offering their customers more expensive low-carbon freight rates. For example, Danish ship owner Maersk had entered in eight green methanol production partnerships and by 2025 it plans to source over 730,000t of green methanol.

LNG less grey methanol $/t VLSFO-equivalent

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

24/05/06

Neste inks deal to supply SAF to Singapore's SIA, Scoot

Neste inks deal to supply SAF to Singapore's SIA, Scoot

Singapore, 6 May (Argus) — Finnish biofuels producer Neste has signed an agreement to supply 1,000t of neat sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from its Singapore refinery to Singapore Airlines (SIA) and Scoot. The blended jet fuel will be delivered from Neste's Singapore refinery to Changi Airport's fuel hydrant system in two batches, once in this year's second quarter and the next in the fourth quarter. The delivered fuel will be a blend of neat SAF, which is made from renewable waste and residue raw materials, and conventional jet fuel. But the exact ratio of the two remains undisclosed. Neste's Singapore facility has a production capacity of 1mn t/yr of SAF, making it the world's largest SAF plant, according to Neste. The firm completed an expansion of its refinery in May 2023 . Neste is also the only company in Singapore producing SAF after Shell scrapped plans to set up a biofuel refinery in the city-state . The delivery from Neste's Singapore refinery to Changi Airport's fuel hydrant system cements the firm's end-to-end SAF supply chain capabilities in the country. Neste is also a minority shareholder at Changi Airport's fuel storage and infrastructure joint venture Changi Airport Fuel Hydrant Installation, to offer blended SAF directly to airlines at the airport. The SIA group aims to use a minimum of 5pc of SAF in its total fuel uplift by 2030, according to the group's chief sustainability officer Lee Wen Fen. This comes as Singapore mandates a 1pc SAF use for flights departing from Singapore from 2026, alongside a SAF levy, in their sustainable airhub blueprint on 19 February. The mandate is projected to rise to 3-5pc by 2030, subject to global developments and wider SAF availability and adoption, according to the blueprint. SIA to offer BCUs SIA will also offer 1,000 SAF book and claim units (BCUs) for purchase by its corporate customers starting from May, with each BCU representing 1t of neat SAF with its associated CO2 reduction benefit. This allows corporate travellers, shippers, and freight forwarders to claim the associated environmental benefits for flights related to their business travel and operations under the Roundtable on Sustainable Biomaterials (RSB) book and claim system, to ensure traceability and credibility of the transactions. By Deborah Sun Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Fire hits Vance Bioenergy's Pasir Gudang facility


24/05/06
24/05/06

Fire hits Vance Bioenergy's Pasir Gudang facility

Singapore, 6 May (Argus) — A fire broke out at Malaysian biodiesel producer Vance Bioenergy's Pasir Gudang facility in southern Johor today, but did not affect biodiesel production, said sources close to the company. Some auxiliary products were affected, a source said but declined to name them because of commercial sensitivity. The cause of the fire is still under investigation. Vance Bioenergy produces biodiesel for the Malaysian and European markets, but there has been limited market reaction to the news so far. The company has a total biodiesel production capacity of 450,000 t/yr, with 300,000 t/yr at Tanjung Langsat and 150,000 t/yr at Pasir Gudang. By Sarah Giam Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Brazil hydroelectric dam bursts under record rains


24/05/03
24/05/03

Brazil hydroelectric dam bursts under record rains

Sao Paulo, 3 May (Argus) — Brazilian power generation company Companhia Energetica Rio das Antas (Ceran) found a partial rupture in its 100MW 14 de Julho hydroelectric plant following record precipitation in Rio Grande do Sul state. Flooding from the record rains has left 37 dead and forced more than 23,000 people out of their homes, causing widespread damage across the state, including washed out bridges and roads across several cities. Ceron reported that the dam of the hydroelectric plant on the Antas River suffered a rupture under the heavy rains and the company implemented an emergency evacuation plan on 1 May. Ceron's 130MW Monte Claro and 130MW Castro Alves plants are under intense monitoring, the company said in a statement. Rio Grande do Sul state governor Eduardo Leite declared a state of emergency and the federal government promised to release funding for emergency disaster relief. Leite said the flooding will likely go down as the worst environmental disaster in the state's history. Brazil's southernmost state along the border with Argentina has been punished by record precipitation over the past year owing to the effects of the strong El Nino weather phenomenon, according to Rio Grande do Sul-based weather forecaster MetSul Meteorologia. Brazilian power company CPFL Energia controls Ceran with a 65pc equity stake. Energy company CEEE-GT, which is owned by steel manufacturer CSN, owns another 30pc, and Norway's Statkraft owns the remaining 5pc. The state had declared a state of emergency as recently as September 2023 because of unusually heavy rains that resulted in the death of more than 30 people. Weather forecasters expect El Nino conditions to abate in the coming months over the eastern Pacific. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Chevron’s oily DJ basin buy boosts gas output


24/05/03
24/05/03

Chevron’s oily DJ basin buy boosts gas output

New York, 3 May (Argus) — Chevron's US natural gas production has surged in recent quarters due to its crude-focused acquisition of Denver-based PDC Energy last August, increasing the oil major's exposure to the US gas market months after that market entered an extended price slump. Chevron's US gas production in the first quarter was 2.7 Bcf/d (76mn m3/d), up by 53pc from the year-earlier quarter and the highest since at least 2021, according to company production data. Chevron's total US output rose by 35pc year-over-year to 1.57 b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d), while US crude output increased by 21pc to 779,000 b/d. The acreage Chevron picked up last year in the DJ basin of northeast Colorado and southeast Wyoming has higher gas-oil ratios than the rest of its US portfolio. Chevron mostly focuses US production in the crude-rich Permian basin of west Texas and southeast New Mexico. Since Chevron closed its acquisition of PDC on 7 August, US gas prices have mostly languished in loss-making territory. Prompt-month Nymex gas settlements at the US benchmark Henry Hub from 7 August 2023 to 2 May 2024 averaged $2.46/mmBtu, down from an average of $4.999/mmBtu in the year-earlier period. In a May 2023 conference call over Chevron's acquisition of PDC, chief executive Mike Wirth expressed optimism for the long-run outlook for natural gas, despite the more immediately dim outlook. "There's going to be stronger global demand for gas growth than there will be for oil over the next decade and beyond as the world looks to decarbonize," Wirth said. Despite lower US gas prices, Chevron has captured $600mn in cost savings from the PDC acquisition between capital and operational expenditures, the company told Argus . Crude prices have also been more resilient. Chevron's profit in the first quarter was $5.5bn, down from $6.6bn in the year-earlier quarter, partly due to lower gas prices. US gas prices have been lower this year as unseasonably warm winter weather and resilient production have created an oversupplied US gas market. A government report Thursday showed US gas inventories up by 35pc from the five-year average. By Julian Hast Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL


24/05/03
24/05/03

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL

London, 3 May (Argus) — Dutch supplier FincoEnergies has supplied shipowner Holland America Line (HAL)with B100 marine biodiesel at the port of Rotterdam for a pilot test. This follows a collaboration between HAL, FincoEnergies' subsidiary GoodFuels, and engine manufacturer Wartsila to trial blends of B30 and B100 marine biodiesel . HAL's vessel the Rotterdam bunkered with B100 on 27 April before embarking on a journey through the Norwegian heritage fjords to test the use of the biofuel. The vessel will utilise one of its four engines to combust B100, which will reportedly cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 86pc on a well-to-wake basis compared with conventional fossil fuel marine gasoil (MGO), according to GoodFuels. There is no engine or fuel structure modification required for the combustion of B100, confirmed HAL. The B100 marine biodiesel blend comprised of sustainable feedstock such as waste fats and oils. The firms did not disclose how much B100 was supplied, or whether this is the beginning of a longer-term supply agreement. Argus assessed the price of B100 advanced fatty acid methyl ester (Fame) 0°C cold filter plugging point dob ARA — a calculated price which includes a deduction of the value of Dutch HBE-G renewable fuel tickets — at an average of $1,177.32/t in April. This is a premium of $410.20/t to MGO dob ARA prices for the same month, which narrows to $321.68/t with the inclusion of EU emissions trading system (ETS) costs for the same time period. By Hussein Al-Khalisy Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more