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Brent, FX drive Brazil natural gas price hike

  • : Natural gas
  • 24/05/27

Average Brazilian natural gas network prices have continued to increase this year, maintaining their differential to the North Sea Dated crude benchmark, amid higher Brent crude prices and the Brazilian real's depreciation to the US dollar.

Brazilian pipeline gas prices rose by 6.7pc to $12.15/mmBtu on 24 May from $11.39/mmBtu on 2 January — while crude rose by 5.9pc, according to Argus data. That increase was more than four percentage points higher the increase in Henry Hub Day-ahead gas index price, which rose by 1.6pc.

The Brazilian real depreciated by 5.3pc to R5.1508 to the US dollar on 24 May from R4.8916/$1 on 2 January. Brent prices, the real-US dollar exchange rate and the Henry Hub index are the main indexations of natural gas contracts in Brazil.

North Sea Dated and Brazilian natural gas prices spiked sharply starting in early April, with crude peaking on 13 April at $93.19/bl and Brazilian gas at $13.525/mmBtu, because of dueling missile strikes between Israel and Iran.

Price increases were spearheaded by Transportadora Brasileira Gasoduto Bolivia (TBG), with that pipeline system reaching $12.833/mmBtu on 24 May, up by more than 12pc from January. Brent accounts for a larger percentage of the price for contracts on that grid than any other, at 16.75pc. The terms were signed in 2022, during the early months of the Russia-Ukraine war when global gas prices were rising. State-controlled Petrobras is a supplier in most of these contracts, but Portugal's Galp also owns a few deals.

Average natural gas prices in the 4,500km (2,796-mile) pipeline owned by Transportadora Associada de Gas (TAG) — which operates in the north, northeast and southeast — were at $11.607/mmBtu on 22 May, a 2.9pc rise from January. Over 40 long-term contracts are connected to the TAG pipeline, reflecting the most diverse chunk of the Brazilian market.

The 2,000km Nova Transportadora do Sudeste (NTS) pipeline — which links Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais and Sao Paulo states with Bolivia — has eight different contracts with indexation to Brent above 12.9pc, including all of Rio de Janeiro's contracts.

The most recent expanded premium to the US gas benchmark price — which stood at $2.60/mmBtu on 23 May — indicates a rise in gas demand driven by cooling across south-Atlantic US states. Extreme weather was responsible early in the year for a hit on spot and futures prices, notably on 12 January, when Henry Hub Day-ahead price posted a sharp rise above $12/mmBtu.


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25/05/22

Brazil senate passes environmental licensing bill

Brazil senate passes environmental licensing bill

Sao Paulo, 22 May (Argus) — Brazil's senate approved a bill that aims to standardize and, in some cases, speed up environmental licensing that the oil industry has blamed for slowing exploration projects . The bill, which the senate approved Wednesday in a 54 to-13 vote, aims to create national standards for environmental licensing, with the goal of simplifying the process for projects that have a limited environmental impact. The bill also aims to create a new type of environmental license for projects that are considered government priorities. These projects would be subject to a more simplified licensing process that would take one year at most. The creation of a new type of licensing for these projects would potentially facilitate oil exploration in the Amazon, the senate said. The change comes as state-controlled Petrobras pushes to begin offshore drilling in the environmentally sensitive Foz do Amazonas offshore basin . The bill would also exempt agricultural projects from obtaining environmental licensing but would continue to require farmers to obtain authorization to remove native vegetation. It also allows small- and medium-sized projects to self-declare their environmental commitments, without the need to have a proper license. Senator Eliziane Gama criticized that proposal, using the disaster in the Brumadinho dam — which burst in 2019 and was considered a medium-sized project — as an example. Brazilian energy think tank Instituto Acende called the bill an important milestone for Brazil, adding that if approved, it would "reduce legal uncertainty, administrative inefficiencies, and obstacles to sustainable development". Environmentalists slammed the proposal, with Observatorio do Clima calling it the "greatest attack on environmental legislation in four decades". The legislation would approve nearly all new projects without environmental impact studies, the group said. The bill will now return to the lower house because senators altered the original text. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Iraq signs integrated energy deal with China’s Geo-Jade


25/05/22
25/05/22

Iraq signs integrated energy deal with China’s Geo-Jade

Dubai, 22 May (Argus) — Iraq's oil ministry has signed an agreement with China's Geo-Jade Petroleum and local firm Basra Crescent to expand the capacity of the 20,000 b/d Tuba oil field and develop a suite of downstream and power assets, in a move that mirrors recent integrated energy deals with international partners. A key component of the South Basrah Integrated Energy Project will be to raise Tuba's production capacity to 100,000 b/d, oil minister Hayan Abdulghani said at the signing ceremony in Baghdad on 21 May. The project will also include processing of up to 50mn ft³/d of associated gas. Downstream components include a 200,000 b/d refinery, a 620,000 t/yr petrochemical plant and a 520,000 t/yr fertilizer facility. A 650MW thermal power plant and a 400MW solar plant will also be part of the project, Abdulghani said. No financial details or project timelines were disclosed. The agreement marks a further step in Geo-Jade's expansion in Iraq, following its successful participation in the country's fifth and sixth licensing rounds. While the company now holds multiple upstream assets in Iraq, it has yet to bring any into production. The deal follows a similar multi-billion dollar agreement signed with TotalEnergies in 2023 , which bundled gas processing, water treatment and solar power with development of the Ratawi field. In February this year, BP signed a major upstream deal with Iraq that also includes power, water and potentially exploration. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

India's Petronet LNG delays Dahej terminal expansion


25/05/22
25/05/22

India's Petronet LNG delays Dahej terminal expansion

Mumbai, 22 May (Argus) — India's state-run LNG terminal operator Petronet LNG has delayed commissioning the 5mn t/yr capacity addition at its Dahej terminal to September, from the previous March deadline, chief executive officer Akshay Kumar Singh said in a press conference this week. The expansion will take the entire capacity of the terminal to 22.5mn t/yr. The firm has cited several challenges, including logistics and recent security concerns owing to cross-border tensions between India and Pakistan, for causing the delay. Petronet commissioned two storage tanks , each with a capacity of 180,000m³, at Dahej in September last year, taking the total to eight storage tanks. The company is also in the process of building a 2.5km jetty that can accommodate Q-Max LNG tankers as well as receive propane and ethane, besides LNG at its upcoming petrochemical plant. Petronet has also announced plans to build a new 5mn t/yr import facility at Gopalpur on the country's east coast, with commissioning expected by 2027. But the project also faces delays for land acquisition, because it shifted plans to a land-based terminal from the previous floating, storage and regasification unit. Petronet would also have to get the project registered and approved by India's Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board under the new LNG terminal registration law, which will further add to costs and delays. It will take 3-4 years from receipt of all approvals to complete the project, Petronet officials said in an analysts' call back in October 2024. By Rituparna Ghosh Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

New Zealand to invest $119mn in gas fields


25/05/22
25/05/22

New Zealand to invest $119mn in gas fields

Sydney, 22 May (Argus) — The New Zealand coalition government will co-invest NZ$200mn ($119mn) over four years in new gas fields to support the country's low natural gas supply, it announced today in its 2025 budget release. This is part of efforts to address the gas shortage risk and will take the government's commercial stake to up to 10-15pc in new gas field developments by the private sector that feed the domestic market. Further details were not disclosed. Natural gas will be critical in New Zealand's energy generation for at least another 20 years, resources minister Shane Jones said on 22 May. The government must stand by the petroleum sector as a co-investor with private companies to get through winter periods and counter the country's reliance on imported thermal coal, according to Jones. The coalition government plans to ensure reliable generation from coal, oil, gas or geothermal resources , Jones said in 2024. New Zealand has been facing a gas shortage for months, and domestic utility Meridian Energy called for an ease in regulations to allow LNG import facilities in early 2025. The country's national gas production fell to its lowest level since 1983 in October-December 2024. By Susannah Cornford Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US gas market expected to tighten in 2026


25/05/20
25/05/20

US gas market expected to tighten in 2026

New York, 20 May (Argus) — US natural gas producers and analysts are forecasting a tighter market in 2026 than previously expected because of rising LNG exports, a slowdown in crude production and a reluctance on the part of gas-focused producers to ramp up supply. The market has already tightened this year as cold winter weather balanced the previously oversupplied domestic market and Venture Global's Plaquemines LNG terminal ramped up faster than expected. Nymex gas delivery for 2026 at the US benchmark Henry Hub settled Tuesday at $4.30/mmBtu, up from $3.91/mmBtu at the start of the year. US LNG exports are expected to rise by 19pc to 14.2 Bcf/d this year, followed by a 15pc increase to 16.4 Bcf/d in 2026, the US Energy Information Administration forecasts. Meanwhile, tariff-induced economic uncertainty and plans by Opec+ to boost supply have lowered crude prices this year, which will probably throttle growth in the Permian basin, a prolific US oil field in west Texas and southeast New Mexico that accounted for 22pc of US gas supply in 2024. US onshore crude production has likely peaked as activity slows in response to the recent decline in oil prices, Diamondback Energy chief executive officer Travis Stice said earlier this month. US producer Antero Resources this week forecast a 5.5 Bcf/d supply growth shortfall from 2025-26 as producers fail to keep up with booming LNG exports, pipeline sales to Mexico and rising gas-fired power demand. Producers have so far been reluctant to ramp up activity in the Haynesville shale basin of east Texas and northwest Louisiana, the major marginal gas supplier to the US market and a key supplier to the coming wave of new US LNG export terminals, all of which are sited in Texas and Louisiana. Producers' hesitation might be linked to past experience, when they ramped up output for new LNG terminals only for those terminals' in-service dates to get pushed back, contributing to an oversupplied market that depressed prices. Haynesville operators' lack of response to higher gas prices in the first quarter of this year led analyst group Enverus to raise its 2026-30 US gas price forecast to $4/mmBtu. Some producers, including EQT, the second-largest US gas producer by volume, are holding off on locking in the elevated prices for 2026 production with financial derivatives, in part because they want exposure to the possibility of even higher prices. Those producers are "playing a little bit of a dangerous game", according to FactSet senior energy analyst Connor McLean. If a mild summer or delayed LNG terminal start-ups reverse expectations of a tighter market, producers might enter a weaker market in 2026 having "missed their chance" at more opportunistic hedges, McLean said. US LNG out the window Tudor Pickering Holt last week raised its "2026 base case forecast" for US gas prices from $4/mmBtu to $5/mmBtu. The Houston-based investment bank expects the US gas market to shift to a state of "material undersupply" in 2026, potentially pushing domestic prices so high that the price of producing LNG from US gas would exceed prevailing global LNG prices. Aside from short-term price spikes caused by storms or maintenance events, this would be the first instance of the US gas-to-global LNG price "arbitrage window" closing since pandemic-induced demand destruction caused more than 175 US LNG cargoes to be cancelled from April-November 2020, according to consultancy McKinsey. Energy Aspects head of North American gas David Seduski said he would not rule out the possibility of high US gas prices reducing exports, but that is not his "base case". According to Seduski, Europe is "in such desperate need of gas" that in the absence of some geopolitical development that boosts Russian gas sales to Europe, high US gas prices would probably just spur higher European gas prices and keep US sales to the continent profitable. Henry Hub prices would probably have to exceed $7/mmBtu given current global gas prices for US LNG cargoes to start being cancelled, FactSet's McLean said. By Julian Hast Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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