Thankfully, the Qatar contract is only one of several options the government is considering for the import of natural gas. We are partial to the idea of buying LNG off the spot markets. LNG prices are high now, but will likely collapse dramatically once the US starts exporting in the next couple of years. The lack of a fixed contract would allow Pakistan to take advantage of those lower prices. Energy infrastructure, once built, lasts for decades. Long-term planning is crucial for a successful energy policy.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 5th, 2014.
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@Azeem: Yeah but the buyers will stop buying from the open market and that should reduce demand there and lead to a lower price. Whether it's been booked in advance or not demand and supply still matters.
CNG is the way to go and floating pipelines are less capital intensive alternative of importing and transporting it from outside and within the country.
Last I knew, the American gas export terminals have already booked all their processing capacity for their customers i.e. the gas is already sold. it won't come into the open market.
I don’t know how this author got the idea of spot purchase of LNG being cheaper than long term sale contract. It is an established fact that spot purchase price is always significantly higher than the contracted one. I do agree that LNG price have dropped in recent past but there is no indication of any collapse. The idea of American LNG triggering a collapse is also farfetched as America is allowing a very limited quantity of LNG to be exported to protect their local downstream industries.
Problem is we don't have the dollars to pay upfront. I bet the Qataris are including some easy payment terms as well. You won't get that elsewhere because our credit rating is junk.