Disruption due to the Iran war has pushed LNG prices higher, helping US exporter Venture Global post a sharp rise in liquefaction fees Read Full Article at RT.com
America’s second-largest liquefied natural gas exporter, Venture Global, says its average liquefaction fee has jumped 69%
US liquefied natural gas exporters are cashing in on the Iran war as the supplies have been disrupted and prices driven higher, a new regulatory filing shows.
Venture Global, the second-largest US LNG supplier, reported a 69% jump in its average liquefaction fee in the second quarter, according to a filing posted on Wednesday.
The Middle East conflict, triggered by the US-Israeli bombing campaign on Iran in late February, has choked off supplies from Qatar, which accounts for roughly a fifth of global LNG exports, creating a supply gap US producers are well placed to fill. Washington has moved to replace lost Qatari cargoes after Iranian strikes crippled the Ras Laffan hub in March, helping push US exports to record highs. Asian spot prices more than doubled in the week after the initial attacks, while European prices remain nearly 50% above pre-war levels. The EU has been particularly exposed to the disruption after replacing much of its Russian pipeline gas with costly US LNG.
Among the biggest beneficiaries has been Venture Global. The company’s implied weighted average fixed liquefaction fee rose to $6.45 per million British thermal units (TBtu), up from $3.82 in the first quarter, according to the filing released. A British thermal unit is a standard measure of the amount of heat energy contained in fuel.
The increase came amid the war-related disruption of LNG flows in the Middle East. Venture Global has greater exposure to the spot market than many of its US rivals, which sell a larger share of their LNG under long-term contracts. Spot cargoes allow exporters to benefit more quickly from spikes in global prices.
Venture Global exported 127 LNG cargoes during the second quarter, including 37 from its Calcasieu Pass terminal and 90 from its Plaquemines facility, the filing shows. That compares with 38 and 92 cargoes, respectively, in the first quarter.
Calcasieu Pass, the company’s first export terminal, entered commercial production in 2022 and helped establish Venture Global as one of the largest LNG exporters in the US.
The company also took advantage of the 2022 energy crisis, selling spot cargoes while the plant remained officially under construction as Russian gas supplies to Europe collapsed following Western sanctions over the Ukraine conflict. The strategy sparked lawsuits from several energy majors, which accused Venture Global of withholding contracted volumes in favor of more profitable spot sales. The company has denied wrongdoing.
Venture Global is not the only beneficiary. Analysts also point to US LNG major Cheniere Energy as another winner from the conflict, as uncertainty in the Strait of Hormuz continues to drive global gas prices higher.