Egypt calls for less LNG as domestic gas boost looms

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Bloomberg

Egypt is paring down its requests for liquefied natural gas. State-run Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Co. is seeking 12 LNG cargoes for delivery in the first quarter of 2018 in a tender, according to two people with direct knowledge. That compares with more than 100 cargoes it planned to purchase via tenders or government-to-government contracts for this year.
Traders are monitoring how much LNG Egypt will buy next year as Africa’s biggest gas market weighs it needs for imports against a revival in domestic production. The Zohr field, the largest gas discovery in the Mediterranean Sea, is nearing first production, potentially spelling an end to the bigger LNG tenders for longer periods in previous years won by suppliers from Glencore Plc to Trafigura PTE Ltd.
The new tender was not expected to be “in the same scale” as previous purchases because Egypt’s “supply
and demand is more balanced,” Mark Catton, Glencore’s director of LNG, told
reporters in London.
The government expects to import five cargoes a month once Zohr starts by year-end, down from eight a month before, Prime Minister Sherif Ismail said in September. Most of the field’s gas will go to Egypt’s domestic market, with some being shipped on to
Europe, Igor Sechin, chief
executive officer of Russia’s Rosneft PJSC, said in Verona, Italy. Rosneft holds 30 percent in the project.
Egypt turned from an LNG exporter to an importer a few years ago as domestic demand soared and production slowed. Since exports halted there have only been sporadic cargoes out of the North African nation’s two production plants. Full-scale export capacity may resume by 2020, Mohamed El Masry, head of EGAS, said last year.

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