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Private LNG terminals boost Brazil supply

  • : Natural gas
  • 24/04/15

A new phase in Brazil's LNG market has begun, with three private-sector terminals starting operations this year, increasing import capacity by nearly 50pc to 133mn m³/d.

US LNG developer New Fortress Energy is operating two of the new terminals, including the 14mn m³/d Gas Sul terminal in Santa Catarina state that received its first cargo last month. New Fortress' terminal in Barcarena, in the northern Para state, started on 29 February.

Gas Sul is connected to the the Brazilian gas market though the TBG pipeline, making it capable of supplying industrial and residential consumers in the south of Brazil, as well as other regions where the traditional supply by pipeline from Bolivia is expected to further decline.

Barcarena consists of an offshore terminal and floating storage regasification unit (FSRU) that will supply LNG to several industrial customers, including a 15-year contract with Norsk Hydro's Alunorte alumina refinery, the largest in the world. The terminal will also supply natural gas to New Fortress' 630MW power plant, which is under construction.

The third LNG facility, controlled by Compass, Cosan, is located Sao Paulo state and expected to start operations soon.

Before this year, Brazil had five LNG regasification terminals. The first three were built by Petrobras: Pecém (2008), Baía de Guanabara (2009) and Bahia (2014, leased by Excelerate after 2021). In 2019, Sergipe state power company (Celse) opened the Sergipe terminal, now operated by Eneva. The latest terminal, Açu, was developed by GNA in 2021.

Initially, the Sergipe and Açu terminals exclusively served the companies' thermal power plants but are now in the process of connecting to Brazil's gas pipeline network. The Sergipe pipeline is already under construction, while the Açu pipeline is in the planning phase.

A hydropower supply crisis in 2020 and 2021 prompted Brazilian importers to buy 6.3mn t of LNG in 2021, data from the trade ministry show. With hydropower reservoirs at full capacity since 2022, Brazil cut LNG imports to 3.1mn t that year and to 602,300t last year, but in the first quarter of 2024 Brazil has imported 486,000t, a sign of capacity growth.

LNG regasification in Brazil provides flexibility to meet fluctuating demand for natural gas in the electricity sector. Given the intermittent and seasonal nature of electricity generation from renewable sources, the operation of thermal power plants varies considerably.

"It serves as a solution to manage supply inconsistencies," according to consultancy Energy Gas.

The LNG regasification projects in Brazil not only supply thermal energy but may also address broader market demand, particularly in underserved regions such as the north and even some gas-restricted areas in the south. With nearly half of Brazil's natural gas production reinjected to maintain crude output as of February, just one-third is available for the open market.


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