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Pakistan is saving 600 million dollars by getting best LNG deal.

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Playing Gas Firms Off Each Other Saved Pakistan $600 Million
By
Faseeh Mangi
and
Dan Murtaugh
September 9, 2018, 11:00 PM GMT+2 Updated on September 10, 2018, 9:48 AM GMT+2
  • Used bids from Gunvor, BP, others to get lower Qatari prices
  • Details revealed to senate committee scrutinizing 2016 deal
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Pakistan said it saved more than $600 million over the first 10 years of a natural gas supply deal by pitting some of the world’s biggest sellers against each other.

A report from the state’s oil marketing company presented two weeks ago to a senate committee, and reviewed by Bloomberg News, details how the 2016 deal came together with Qatar, the world’s largest supplier of liquefied natural gas. It also sheds a rare light on such high-stakes energy deals, which are almost exclusively settled behind closed doors and stay hidden from public scrutiny.



The maneuvering by Pakistan came after two years of negotiations hit an impasse as Qatar refused to lower its offer price for LNG. So Pakistan sought leverage on the open market in late 2015, publicly seeking 120 cargoes in two large tenders, which brought in bids from suppliers including Royal Dutch Shell Plc and BP Plc.

While negotiations with Qatargas Operating Co. were under way, the tender was “issued to fetch maximum number of bidders and best price option,” the presentation said. “The strategy helped bring down prices with Qatargas and saved $610 million."

Timeline of a Deal
Pakistan and Qatar's LNG negotiations

Source: Pakistan State Oil presentation to Senate Standing Committee on Petroleum

Pakistan then informed Qatar about the lowest bid, from Switzerland-based Gunvor Group Ltd., which the Middle East supplier agreed to match. Pakistan still purchased some LNG from Gunvor, awarding it the first tender. But the volumes it sought from the second tender ended up in the final Qatar deal, bulking it up by 25 percent.

The head of a senate committee now scrutinizing the deal, Mohsin Aziz, confirmed the details of the presentation in an interview last week. Pakistan State Oil Co. and Qatargas officials didn’t respond to requests for comment. Gunvor and BP declined to comment. Shell said it looks forward to future LNG options in Pakistan, without directly commenting on the tender.

The deal with Qatar, which was eventually settled for 3.75 million metric tons annually over 15 years, marked Pakistan’s emergence as an LNG buyer. The country turned to imports after its own declining production forced some factories to shut and caused blackouts. Imports have grown rapidly since early 2016, with Pakistan the seventh-largest LNG buyer globally in August, according to Bloomberg vessel-tracking data.

Need for More
Pakistan's LNG imports are set to soar to 2030

Source: Bloomberg NEF forecast

Negotiations between state agencies and foreign LNG suppliers have been a target of criticism by lawmakers in recent years, some of whom claim that the lack of transparency is hiding potential corruption. These concerns helped the nation’s new prime minister, Imran Khan, sweep to victory in July promising reform. Khan, a former cricket star, has also pledged to strengthen Pakistan’s accountability bureau, which is said to be conducting an inquiry into the country’s first LNG receiving terminal.

Against that backdrop, the Senate Standing Committee on Petroleum, which is also looking into other energy-related developments, brought in Pakistan State Oil officials Aug. 31 to explain the history of the deal. That the 2016 Qatar contract was negotiated in private and the only publicly available copy is redacted raised particular concern.

Despite Pakistan State Oil’s assertion that it saved money, Aziz, the committee head and a member of Khan’s party, said there are still concerns over the deal and will likely recommend the matter for further investigation by government agencies.

The redacted portions of the contract, which were also reviewed by Bloomberg, include the following:

  • The contract price of the LNG per million British thermal units is the equivalent of 13.37 percent of the average price of Brent oil futures for the preceding three months
  • Pakistan can increase or decrease the size of the contract by five cargoes a year, equivalent to about 8 percent
  • The parties can’t renegotiate the price for 10 years
  • Pakistan can sell cargoes to other buyers and divert to other terminals
  • Port charges to unload cargoes for seller can’t exceed $320,000
These details cover normal contract terms that are generally considered in the industry to be commercially sensitive, according to Fauziah Marzuki, an LNG analyst with Bloomberg NEF. The price and other terms of the contract were in line with in other deals reached around the same time, she said.

Since the launch of the LNG industry in the 1960s, long-term contracts have largely been priced as a percentage of oil, known as a slope. A 13 percent slope means that if the price of oil were $100 a barrel, gas would cost $13 per million British thermal units.

Spot LNG in the Japan & South Korea market traded at $11.52 per million British thermal units on Friday. Brent oil, the global benchmark, settled that day at $76.83 a barrel.

Qatar might have been feeling other pressures in early 2016 beyond Pakistan’s tactics. That was also the nadir of the oil bust, as crude crashed from more than $100 a barrel in mid-2014 to less than $30, bringing down LNG with it.

Reducing the contract’s price from to 13.37 percent from 13.9 percent will save Pakistan $610 million over 10 years at an average Brent price of $60 a barrel, according to the oil company’s presentation.

(Updates energy prices in 14th paragraph. An earlier version of this story corrected the location of Gunvor’s head office.)

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...nts-off-each-other-saved-pakistan-600-million
 
Bloomberg and FT are publishing paid content. There is no doubt, we as a pakistani believe to live in our own heaven.

Are you denying that these are not paid contents? What world do you live in?
 
They quoting the same report which was presented by PTI senator in Senate.

PTI has a Qatari lobby too. Its how business called the government is run.
600 million dollar over 10 years make as little sense as calling it saved money.
 
There r massive corruption in this LNG case......and we first need to investigate it to find out ourselves......some mere bloomberg who isnt even a Pakistani or a reliable source to begin with cant really expect we the citizens of Pakistan are going to believe it.

We do whats in the best of interests for us. And us and only us r the judge and jury on that. Afterall, we r the 5th largest consumer market which isnt even sterilized or saturated market as that of India now.
 
I don't understand how we are saving 600 million dollars when Iran is sitting next to us.

Iran will give us gas in expensive price than qatar?
 
Lol I see hate even in every word by posters,Good Job being done by last govt and finally something which was tangible not on FB/Twitter
 
600 million dollars for 10 years is 60 million dollars per year. It amounts to about 600 crore PKR or (6 billion PKR) per year according to average exchange rate for past 10 years. Considering Pakistani budget averaging 3-4 lakh crores PKR (3-4 trillion PKR) every year, this 6 billion PKR is a small change, equivalent to about 0.2% of budget.

The LNG imports is 3.75 million tonnes, totaling about 185 million MBTU. Savings of 60 million dollars is equal to saving 0.3 dollar per MBTU. This is insignificant savings. If Pakistan bought gas from Iran via pipeline, the shipping cost saved itself would be massive. Transportation of CNG via pipeline from Iran would reduce the cost by over 15% of the LNG cost. Compressing CNG to liquid is a very costly process and hence it is best to use via pipeline rather than LNG shipment.
 
600 million dollars for 10 years is 60 million dollars per year. It amounts to about 600 crore PKR or (6 billion PKR) per year according to average exchange rate for past 10 years. Considering Pakistani budget averaging 3-4 lakh crores PKR (3-4 trillion PKR) every year, this 6 billion PKR is a small change, equivalent to about 0.2% of budget.

The LNG imports is 3.75 million tonnes, totaling about 185 million MBTU. Savings of 60 million dollars is equal to saving 0.3 dollar per MBTU. This is insignificant savings. If Pakistan bought gas from Iran via pipeline, the shipping cost saved itself would be massive. Transportation of CNG via pipeline from Iran would reduce the cost by over 15% of the LNG cost. Compressing CNG to liquid is a very costly process and hence it is best to use via pipeline rather than LNG shipment.


Good Point
 
We need to make few more coal power plants and use our own coal
Pakistan has 2-3 billion ton of coal. India, for example, uses 900 million ton of coal every year. Can Pakistan really run coal plants that are large enough to power entire Pakistan for even 15 years?
 
If it is so good, so nice, so profitable, then make the deal public,

Why Qatar threatening relationship if the deal goes public.

Paid propaganda article...

There is no way we could prove that we are getting 600 million if the deal isn't public and don't know what at amount we are purchasing....
 

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