UAE’s Adnoc says ‘advancing’ towards Ruwais LNG FID

Energy News Beat

UAE’s energy giant Adnoc is getting closer to taking a final investment decision to build its second LNG terminal in Al Ruwais.

Earlier this year, Adnoc announced it will build its second LNG terminal in Al Ruwais. The firm previously planned to construct the facility in Fujairah.

Adnoc Gas, the gas and LNG unit of Adnoc, recently also awarded US energy services firm Baker Hughes a contract for the planned LNG export terminal.

“We are advancing towards a final investment decision for a project in Ruwais that will establish one of the world’s lowest carbon intensity LNG production facilities,” Adnoc said in a social media post.

The firm did not say when it expects to take the final decision on the large project.

Located in Al Ruwais Industrial City, the project features two 4.8 million tons per annum (mtpa) LNG trains operating on renewable and nuclear energy, which will make it the MENA region’s first LNG project to be powered by “clean energy”, according to Adnoc.

Adnoc also noted the procurement of $400 million all-electric compressors is already underway.

Once operational, the facility will more than double Adnoc’s LNG production capacity from 6 mtpa to 15 mtpa, it said.

Adnoc owns a 70 percent stake in Adnoc LNG, that currently produces about 6 mtpa of LNG from its facilities on Das Island.

The energy giant launched Adnoc Gas on January 1 as it looks to further expand its international presence.

Adnoc Gas recently signed a deal to supply LNG to Jera Global Markets, a joint venture between majority shareholder Japan’s Jera and France’s EDF, and it signed a deal with a unit of state-owned PetroChina.

Earlier this year, Adnoc Gas signed a three-year LNG supply deal with a unit of France’s TotalEnergies.

After that, the firm signed a long-term deal to supply LNG to India’s top state oil refiner Indian Oil, and it signed a deal worth up to $550 million with Japan Petroleum Exploration (Japex).

The total value of LNG supply agreements signed by Adnoc Gas since its listing in March this year is between $9.4 billion and $12 billion, the firm previously said.

Real Estate Investor Pulse

1031 Exchange E-Book

ENB Top News 
ENB
Energy Dashboard
ENB Podcast
ENB Substack

The post UAE’s Adnoc says ‘advancing’ towards Ruwais LNG FID appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Italy’s Snam to launch Ravenna FSRU capacity auctions

Energy News Beat

Italy’s Snam is working to launch in the upcoming period auctions for regasification capacity at its planned FSRU-based LNG import terminal offshore Ravenna in the Adriatic Sea.

This will be Italy’s third FSRU-based LNG import terminal after the launch of Snam’s Piombino FSRU-based facility earlrier this year.

Snam’s 170,000-cbm Golar Tundra received its first commercial LNG cargo in Piombino from Italy’s Eni in July.

The company’s CEO Stefano Venier, said on Thursday during Snam’s third-quarter earnings call that the Piombino FSRU received in total three LNG cargoes since July.

He said that Piombino regasification slots are fully booked for thermal year 2023/2024.

Besides this facility, Snam owns the Panigaglia facility and has stakes in the FSRU Toscana and the Adriatic LNG import terminal.

Last year, Snam purchased BW LNG’s 2015-built FSRU BW Singapore for $400 million, and will install it offshore Ravenna.

The FSRU has a maximum storage capacity of about 170,000 cubic meters of LNG and a nominal continuous regasification capacity of about 5 billion cubic meters per year.

It currently works in Egypt and the FSRU’s charter contract with Egas expires in November 2023.

Snam already awarded the Ravena FSRU contracts and started construction in Ravenna.

“We will launch by year-end or in the beginning of 2024 the capacity auction for the second vessel to be operational in Ravenna by the end of next year,” Venier said.

During the call, Venier also discussed possible opportunities in M&A and mentioned that ExxonMobil is working to sell its stake in the Adriatic LNG terminal.

The world’s first offshore gravity-based LNG import terminal sits about 14 kilometers offshore of Porto Levante and has regasification capacity of about 9 bcm per year.

ExxonMobil has a 70.7 percent stake in Adriatic LNG, while QatarEnergy holds 22 percent and Snam owns 7.3 percent.

“As you know, ExxonMobil and QatarEnergy are negotiating with BlackRock the acquisition of a stake in Adriatic LNG,” Venier said, adding that the company has the right to increase its stake in the facility.

He said that these talks have not ended yet, “so we don’t know the final conditions and terms that will be agreed by the three parties.”

Once Snam receives these conditions, the company will evaluate whether it will increase its stake in the LNG facility, he said.

Real Estate Investor Pulse

1031 Exchange E-Book

ENB Top News 
ENB
Energy Dashboard
ENB Podcast
ENB Substack

The post Italy’s Snam to launch Ravenna FSRU capacity auctions appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Certain COVID-19 Vaccines Linked To Elevated Risk Of Guillain-Barré Syndrome

Energy News Beat

Authored by Ellen Wan via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

As the vaccination rate continues to rise, an increasing number of side effects are being reported. Research indicates that COVID-19 viral vector-based vaccines increase the risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) by three to four times compared to mRNA-based vaccines.

The Link Between Vaccines and Guillain-Barré Syndrome Risk 

Increasing evidence suggests an association between COVID-19 vaccines and Guillain-Barré Syndrome. One study revealed an increase in GBS cases within 42 days of receiving the first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine. The researchers suggest a potential link between the AstraZeneca vaccine and the increased risk of GBS.

In March, a prospective surveillance study published in Scientific Reports indicated that out of 38,828,691 doses of COVID-19 vaccine administered in Gyeonggi Province, South Korea, between February 2021 and March 2022, 105,409 adverse events were reported, including 55 cases of GBS.

After assessing the risk factors for GBS following COVID-19 vaccination, it was found that viral vector-based vaccines were linked to a three-to-fourfold higher risk of GBS compared to mRNA-based vaccines.

In terms of age and gender, the incidence of GBS was higher in individuals aged 60 and older compared to younger age groups, and it was more common in men than women.

Based on a vaccine mechanism evaluation, the incidence rate of GBS for viral vector-based vaccines was 4.49 cases per million doses, higher than mRNA-based vaccines (Pfizer and Moderna) which had an incidence rate of 0.80 cases per million doses.

The researchers are urging health care providers to closely monitor individuals following COVID-19 vaccination, especially men who received their first dose of viral vector-based vaccines.

Onset of GBS Following COVID-19 Vaccination 

In 2021, the British Medical Journal published a case study in which a 48-year-old man from Malta experienced facial paralysis on the left side of his face 10 days after receiving the first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine. He was diagnosed with Bell’s Palsy grade III and received treatment with prednisolone, an oral corticosteroid, as well as eye drops and eye care.

The patient had pre-existing blood lipid abnormalities before vaccination, but no other relevant medical history or history of infections.

The patient also experienced intense and excruciating pain in the central area of the back, with conventional pain relievers proving ineffective. Over the next 24 hours, the patient’s facial paralysis symptoms progressively worsened, and similar symptoms appeared on the right side of the face.

Three days later, the patient developed grade V facial nerve paralysis on both sides of the face, and the severe back pain persisted. However, neurological examinations did not reveal any defects. The patient underwent a lumbar puncture, which revealed elevated protein levels (1,264 milligrams per liter) and an excess of lymphocytes beyond normal values, leading to a diagnosis of GBS. Subsequently, the patient was discharged after an improvement in facial paralysis symptoms.

However, in less than 24 hours, the patient returned to the emergency department with symptoms including lower limb weakness, absent reflexes, foot drop, moderate weakness in the hands, and pain sensations when wearing gloves or long socks. The doctor administered intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) at a dosage of 2 grams per kilogram of body weight, which continued for five days, along with oral prednisolone.

Subsequently, the patient’s condition rapidly improved, with significant recovery in muscle strength and limb paralysis, and complete disappearance of the facial paralysis symptom. After undergoing intensive physical rehabilitation therapy, the patient regained the ability to function independently. A follow-up examination two months later revealed only mild weakness in both hand muscles.

Researchers believe that among the various side effects of different vaccines, neurological complications may be one of the most severe, thus causing the greatest concern.

GBS affects multiple peripheral nerves in the body (polyneuropathy). Peripheral neuropathy can also affect the nerves controlling functions of the heart and circulation system (cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy).

Symptoms of Guillain-Barré Syndrome

According to National Health Service in the UK, Guillain-Barré Syndrome is a rare and severe neurological disorder caused by an immune system dysfunction, with an extremely low incidence rate.

Under normal circumstances, the immune system attacks any pathogens that make their way into the body. When the immune system malfunctions, it can mistakenly attack and damage the nerves.

The symptoms of GBS typically begin in the hands and feet before spreading to the arms and legs. Common symptoms include numbness, pins and needles, muscle weakness, pain, as well as balance and coordination problems. These symptoms may worsen over the next few days or weeks and then gradually improve. In severe cases, GBS can lead to difficulties in walking, breathing, or swallowing. Occasionally, it can be life-threatening, and some individuals may experience long-term complications. If you experience any symptoms of GBS, it is crucial to seek immediate medical attention.

According to the latest records released by the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program of the Taiwan Ministry of Health and Welfare on Aug. 10, a total of 150 GBS cases related to adverse events following COVID-19 vaccination have been reviewed. Among them, a 56-year-old Mr. Tsai from Taipei experienced numbness in all four limbs, breathing difficulties, and unsteady walking after receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine. Additionally, two individuals who received the Moderna vaccine reported symptoms, including numbness and weakness in their upper and lower limbs, thigh pain, and more. All of them sought medical attention, and neurological tests confirmed Guillain-Barré Syndrome in all three cases. The Ministry of Health and Welfare offered compensation of TWD 450,000 (nearly $14 million), TWD 70,000 ($2,166), and TWD 250,000 (nearly $8000), respectively.

Treatment of GBS

According to the National Institutes of Health, there are currently two commonly used treatment methods to interrupt immune-related nerve damage: plasma exchange and intravenous immunoglobulin therapy. Both treatment options show no significant difference in effectiveness if started within two weeks of GBS symptoms onset.

1. Plasma exchange: This procedure involves extracting some of the patient’s blood through a catheter, treating it to remove blood cells, and then reintroducing it into the body. Plasma contains antibodies, and plasma exchange helps remove harmful antibodies that damage the nerves.

2. Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy: Immunoglobulins are proteins naturally produced by the immune system to target invading organisms. This therapy can lessen the immune system’s attack on the nervous system and shorten recovery time.

According to Taiwan’s Far Eastern Memorial Hospital, it is recommended to closely monitor fluctuations in heart rate and blood pressure, as well as regularly assess the degree of respiratory muscle weakness. This is crucial because the condition can progress to respiratory failure or lead to life-threatening arrhythmias, necessitating intubation or pacemaker implantation to maintain cardiopulmonary function. Additionally, pain management and early rehabilitation exercises can help alleviate symptoms and restore muscle strength.

Loading…

Real Estate Investor Pulse

1031 Exchange E-Book

ENB Top News 
ENB
Energy Dashboard
ENB Podcast
ENB Substack

The post Certain COVID-19 Vaccines Linked To Elevated Risk Of Guillain-Barré Syndrome appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Top LNG importer China re-selling more cargoes, eyes trading gains

Energy News Beat

China, the world’s top importer of liquefied natural gas (LNG), is increasingly re-selling some of the super-chilled fuel to other Asian buyers as it looks to profit from price swings.

Armed with a growing portfolio of long-term supply deals recently struck with Qatar and U.S. exporters, as well as extensive terminal capacity, Chinese companies led by state giant PetroChina are more actively trading LNG, but still lag far behind global majors such as BP, Shell and TotalEnergies.

Chinese customs data shows that China reloaded 617,000 metric tons of imported LNG during the first nine months of this year, compared with 576,000 tons in all of 2022, 26,000 tons in 2021 and 59,000 tons in 202

China’s LNG sales have increased along with rising Asian demand after the disruption in Russian exports to Europe from the Ukraine war sparked price volatility and tightened supplies globally.

Asia spot prices soared to record highs of $70 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) last year. They have since eased to $17/mmBtu, encouraging demand from Asian buyers, but are still above single-digit levels seen before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Top Chinese LNG trader PetroChina International (PCI) is spearheading the retrading, which is recorded by Chinese customs as exports from bonded storage tanks.

South Korea has been the top buyer so far this year, taking 27% of China’s reloads, followed by Thailand, Bangladesh, and Japan, as well as Kuwait, Chinese customs data showed.

“We need to pull all levers when it comes to managing market swings,” Zhang Yaoyu, PCI’s global head of LNG, told Reuters.

Re-selling LNG cargoes is one initiative among others – such as using financial derivatives products and developing infrastructure like regasification terminals and underground storage – to offset market volatility and improve overall supply security, he said.

Still, the trading volume is a small fraction of PCI’s supply portfolio, and fluctuates depending on market conditions, Zhang added.

While Qatari contracts carry rigid destination clauses, most U.S. supplies and some purchases from global portfolio players are tradeable.

China also receives some LNG from Australia and Indonesia with flexible destination clauses.

HAINAN ISLAND HUB

State trader CNOOC and privately controlled Jovo Energy also re-exported a cargo each this year, both to Japan, Kpler data shows.

The main reloading point has been the Yangpu regasification terminal, in the southern island province of Hainan, which can handle 3 million tons of LNG annually and is closer to southeast and south Asian buyers than China’s east coast terminals, according to Kpler and ICIS.

Chinese LNG buyers have also been setting up or expanding trading desks in London and Singapore to better manage their supply portfolios.

CATCHING UP

China is now the world’s second largest LNG re-exporter after Spain, which exported 1.7 million tons in 2022 and 1.15 million tons so far in 2023, Kpler data showed.

“This could lead to it taking up a similar role in Asia to one that Spain has had in Europe… as a key centre for reloading cargoes, helping to offer flexibility to the market,” said ICIS LNG analyst Alex Froley.

China’s LNG receiving capacity is expected to expand 30% to nearly 182 million tons annually by 2025 from 139 million tons this year, CNOOC has estimated.

Source: Zawya.com

Real Estate Investor Pulse

1031 Exchange E-Book

ENB Top News 

ENB

Energy Dashboard

ENB Podcast

ENB Substack

 

The post Top LNG importer China re-selling more cargoes, eyes trading gains appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Venture Global Accused of Reneging on LNG Contracts for Europe

Energy News Beat

European oil majors have asked a cross-Atlantic government task force to intervene in a dispute with Venture Global LNG Inc., warning that the US supplier “reneging” on contracts to supply liquefied natural gas threatens Europe’s energy security and undermines the US as a reliable supplier.

In separate letters, Shell Plc and BP Plc accuse Venture Global of “misconduct” for withholding fossil-fuel cargo agreed under long-term contracts and instead opting to sell LNG on the spot market at higher prices. The letters Bloomberg News has seen were sent by the companies in October to an energy-security task force set up by the US and European Union.

Venture Global responded on Nov. 10, saying that the accusations are “false” and that a request for governments to interfere in agreements among private companies is “outrageous.”

The FT first reported on the letters. It cites another from Italy’s Edison SpA claiming Venture Global stands to gain $17.5 billion from short-term market sales, compared to $2.8 billion under long-term contracts, according to a Wood Mackenzie report.

Venture Global said the “highly coordinated attack” by the European energy industry is an attempt to “modify their contracts and stifle competition” in the global LNG market.

Source: Rigzone.com

Real Estate Investor Pulse

1031 Exchange E-Book

ENB Top News 

ENB

Energy Dashboard

ENB Podcast

ENB Substack

The post Venture Global Accused of Reneging on LNG Contracts for Europe appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Most Americans feel poorer under Biden – FT

Energy News Beat

The majority of US voters are dissatisfied with President Joe Biden’s economic policies, the Financial Times reported on Monday, citing the latest monthly poll conducted by the Global Strategy Group and North Star Opinion Research.

According to the findings, some 61% of respondents said they disapproved of Biden’s handling of the economy, while only 36% approved.

Nearly 70% claimed that Biden’s economic policies have either hurt the American economy or had no impact on it. Some 33% stressed that the president’s actions have “hurt the economy a lot.” Just 26% saw Biden’s policies as beneficial, while only 14% believe their finances have improved since the president took office.

Some 82% of respondents stated that they were especially worried about rising prices and the failure of the current administration to deal with the problem. US inflation has dropped from last year’s peak of 9.1%, but was still well above the 2% target at 3.7% year-on-year in September. Some 75% of those polled named inflation as the greatest threat to the US economy in the next six months.

Every group – Democrats, Republicans and independents – list rising prices as by far the biggest economic threat… and the biggest source of financial stress. That is bad news for Biden, and the more so considering how little he can do to reverse the perception of prices before election day,” Erik Gordon, a professor at Michigan’s Ross School, told the FT.


READ MORE:
US credit card debt hits historic high – data

Of the respondents, 52% said they had cut spending on food or other everyday necessities due to higher prices, while some 65% were forced to slash non-essential spending on things such as holidays or eating out.

The poll was conducted online between November 2 and 7 among 1,004 registered voters nationwide.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

 

The post Most Americans feel poorer under Biden – FT appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Advocates press Wisconsin regulators to reconsider natural gas plant need

Energy News Beat

When Jenny Van Sickle was elected to the Superior, Wisconsin, City Council in 2017, she joked that the first two calls she got were from her mother and representatives of the Nemadji Trail Energy Center, a proposed 625-megawatt combined-cycle gas-fired power plant planned for a site on the Nemadji River adjacent to her neighborhood, East End.

A social worker by training, she sought office to fight for things like mental health resources and accessible childcare. The nuances of a massive power plant proposal were beyond her expertise, and like other civic leaders, she was open to promises that it would provide jobs, a bridge to clean energy and grid reliability. 

Heavy industry was nothing new in the port town; an Enbridge Energy oil terminal is also located in the neighborhood. In 2019, the council unanimously passed a resolution supporting the project. 

But the more Van Sickle learned, the more she had doubts about the plant. She began asking more questions and felt like she was getting “misinformation and disinformation” from its developers — Dairyland Power Cooperative and Minnesota Power. 

She was especially concerned to learn that the proposal included the possibility of burning heavily polluting diesel if natural gas wasn’t available. 

“When you finally build up the courage to talk about it, it’s like a dam breaking,” she recounted, and other residents also began to share their fears.

Now, Van Sickle devotes much of her life to opposing the $700 million power plant, which received crucial approval from the state Public Service Commission in January 2020 and is scheduled to go online by 2027 — if it receives permits still needed from agencies including the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Construction could reportedly start next year.

Meanwhile, the Sierra Club and Clean Wisconsin are demanding the Public Service Commission reconsider and reopen the process around the crucial certificate of public convenience and necessity that was issued in January 2020.

That’s because two major factors have changed since the commission granted the certificate.

Wisconsin utilities have launched plans to install 480 MW of battery storage by 2025. That’s enough storage to work in tandem with renewables to provide reliable power, advocates argue. 

And the Inflation Reduction Act offers direct-pay incentives for renewables, replacing tax credits and making renewable development much more financially viable for nonprofit entities, including rural electric cooperatives like Dairyland, that don’t pay taxes. 

Clean Wisconsin and Sierra Club filed a lawsuit challenging the Public Service Commission’s certificate. A district court backed the commission, and they are now awaiting an appellate court decision.

Clean Wisconsin staff attorney Brett Korte noted that the Public Service Commission has the authority to reopen a case when it chooses. 

One of the three public service commissioners, Rebecca Valcq, argued against granting the certificate. Her dissent cited environmental impacts including erosion and the effect on wetlands, and she questioned the availability of water — to be drawn from an aquifer — to cool the plant. She also stated the plant was not needed for a reliable electric supply. 

Advocates are hopeful the commission would decide differently if the case is reopened.

“It’s just a shame it got approved when it did, before a lot of other opportunities were there,” Korte said. “Ultimately it’s still an opportunity for Dairyland to make a different decision. They haven’t started construction; they could still make the right call here. There are all kinds of advocates and partners who would love to talk to them about other opportunities.”

Dairyland describes the Nemadji Trail Energy Center, or NTEC, as key to its investment in renewables, to provide power when they aren’t available. 

Dairyland spokesperson Katie Thomson said Dairyland has submitted a letter of intent to apply for funding for 1,700 megawatts of wind and solar from the New ERA (Empowering Rural America) program created by the Inflation Reduction Act, which makes $9.7 billion available for rural electric cooperatives to transition to clean energy, administered by the USDA. 

Dairyland spokesperson Deb Mirasola said that the Nemadji plant would not be included in that application, but “as we have noted all along NTEC is critical to supporting the new renewable additions. The Nemadji Trail Energy Center is key to the clean energy transition, as a reliable, low-emissions natural gas power plant which will ramp up and down quickly to support renewable energy.”

Thomson said Dairyland will likely apply for funding for the Nemadji plant through the USDA’s Rural Utilities Service program.

Korte said seeking federal funding for natural gas is “ironic and sad especially now with the new federal funding for renewables. We don’t think it’s a good investment at all. They would be better off investing in renewable energy including battery storage if they feel like they need that kind of peaking capacity.” 

Van Sickle was the first person of color and Indigenous person elected to the Superior City Council. She is an Alaskan Native of Tlingit and Athabaskan descent. Meanwhile Superior sits amid ceded Indigenous lands on the edge of Lake Superior, which Ojibwe refer to as Gitchi-Gami. 

The gas plant would pose a threat to the natural ecology that tribal members hold sacred, including the St. Louis estuary, critics say. Advocates are demanding a more stringent environmental impact study than the developers have already submitted, as part of the process to secure federal funding. Almost 10,000 letters have been sent to the USDA asking the federal agency to deny loans for the gas plant in order to protect Gitchi-Gami.

Additionally, the plant would be very near a cemetery where almost 200 Ojibwe ancestors were buried, after they were disinterred from a traditional burial ground in 1918 for U.S. Steel to build ore docks, which were never actually constructed. 

The Nemadji application to the Public Service Commission acknowledges that it is within half a mile of three residential neighborhoods. Van Sickle described it as an environmental justice issue, with residents put at risk from the pollution and any accidents. Many residents still remember having to evacuate during a nearby refinery fire in 2018, and a benzene spill in 1992, at other local industrial facilities. 

“I know what it’s like for my neighbors to live amongst these giants,” she said.

Van Sickle, who is known as an ally of labor unions, said the 350 jobs promised at the plant do not compensate for all the risks and concerns.

“In the last few years we have worked so hard to invest in East End,” she said, including by raising money to revamp Carl Gullo Park named for a local World War II veteran and educator. “If a local official is not going to protect their most sacred spaces, who will? Sometimes progress is saying no.”

Along with the gas plant, the proposal calls for a new 345-kilovolt transmission line, relocation of an existing gas pipeline, and construction of a new gas pipeline to tap an existing gas supply network.

Van Sickle and other opponents argue that not only is the gas plant problematic in its own right, but it will also drive more investment in gas infrastructure and fracking, which has already had devastating environmental consequences for the larger Great Lakes region.

Dairyland says the plant could be retrofitted to run on up to 30% hydrogen, which is being promoted as an industrial energy source by the Department of Energy including with the establishment of hydrogen hubs nationwide.

The plant would be a merchant generator selling power on the open market in the MISO regional transmission organization territory.

“The Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) has affirmed the need for NTEC to support additional renewable energy resources, while ensuring reliability is not compromised,” Mirasola said. “Dairyland is dedicated to providing sustainable, reliable and affordable power for our member cooperatives. NTEC will be a critical capacity resource to ensure reliable power for our members at a time when resource adequacy in the MISO region is declining significantly.”

Dairyland is made up of 24 member electric co-ops in southern Minnesota, western Wisconsin, northern Iowa, and northern Illinois, and also serves 17 municipal utilities. Rural cooperatives in theory provide their members more say in decisions than an investor-owned utility, but critics say that cooperative members that oppose more fossil fuel generation have not been heard.

Dairyland’s current power mix is about 52% natural gas and 48% coal, according to an analysis by the Sierra Club, which also found Dairyland could save members $55 million by retiring two coal plants and replacing them with renewables, without adding any new gas-fired generation. 

“There’s a lot of hesitancy around clean energy because of misinformation from fossil fuel industry and lobbyists,” said Cassie Steiner, Wisconsin Sierra Club senior campaign coordinator. “Definitely we see some cooperative members bringing up those pieces of misinformation or viewing clean energy as a very politicized dichotomy, rather than something that is accessible, affordable, reliable. The frustrations we’re hearing are the member cooperatives maybe aren’t listening to clean energy advocates who are their members.” 

One of those frustrated cooperative members is Dena Eakles, a writer and activist who runs organic Echo Valley Farm and a sustainability nonprofit in western Wisconsin. She is a member of Vernon Electric Cooperative, part of Dairyland, and she is upset that Vernon board members have not opposed the Nemadji Trail plan. 

“To me, any kind of fossil fuel energy is not clean energy,” she said. “People just see the end result, my lights go on, my stove runs — everything’s hunky dory. We need more people to understand and put pressure on their own board. We just need to help each other understand the peril of this time.”

 

The post Advocates press Wisconsin regulators to reconsider natural gas plant need appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

BRICS country imports record amount of Russian oil

Energy News Beat

Russia delivered a record amount of crude to Brazil in October, becoming the country’s third-largest supplier, RIA Novosti reported on Friday citing statistics.   

The Latin American country resumed crude imports from Russia in September after a two-year halt, the outlet said.   

Moscow exported 207,000 tons of crude worth $133 million in October, as it seeks to strengthen its position as a leading fuel exporter to the fellow BRICS member as part of broader efforts to build new markets.   

October shipments were the largest since at least 1997 both in terms of volume and value, as no earlier statistics are publicly available, RIA noted. Prior to this, Brazil’s record volume of Russian oil purchases came in May 2002, when it totaled 139,800 tons.    

Increased exports helped Russia become Brazil’s third-largest oil supplier last month, behind the US ($346 million) and neighboring Guyana ($187 million). The top five crude suppliers to the Latin American country also includes Algeria ($112 million) and Saudi Arabia ($98 million).  


READ MORE:
Russia’s oil and gas revenues hit 18-month high

Along with Brazil, two other BRICS countries, India and China, have emerged as the most active buyers of Russian oil since the EU and G7 imposed an embargo accompanied by price caps on Russian oil and petroleum products.   

Analysts say that discounted Russian oil is a financial benefit for Brazil, as its government struggles to reduce the cost of transport fuels.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

 

The post BRICS country imports record amount of Russian oil appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Europe Taps Record-High Natural Gas Storage As Temperatures Drop

Energy News Beat

Authored by Tsvetana Paraskova via OilPrice.com,

Traders have begun withdrawing natural gas from Europe’s record-high inventories this week as the weather turned colder and heating demand rose.

The gas storage sites in the EU were 99.57% full as of November 8, according to data from Gas Infrastructure Europe. In the past few days, most EU countries have made consecutive small net withdrawals of gas from their storage, the data showed.

These were the first consecutive net withdrawals from Europe’s gas storage since April—the end of the previous winter heating season.  

Withdrawals may accelerate this weekend as some parts of Europe could see lower-than-normal temperatures, but next week many countries are expected to return to typical or above-normal temperatures.

LSEG analysts expect temperatures in France and Germany could be 2-5 degrees Celsius higher than normal at the beginning of next week, Reuters reported on Friday.

Continued weak demand and forecasts for higher temperatures next week sent the front-month Dutch TTF Natural Gas Futures, the benchmark for Europe’s gas trading, plunging by 3.8% as of 11:25 a.m. GMT on Friday.

Despite the nearly full inventories, Europe is not out of the woods yet as a cold winter and potential supply disruptions could tip the balance into deficit and send prices soaring.

Volatility is expected to continue, also because of the threat to supply from the Eastern Mediterranean in case of a flare-up in the Hamas-Israel war.

“The (Dutch) TTF near curve will still likely carry a substantial amount of risk premium related to the typical weather risks and concerns over tension escalation in the Middle East,” Energy Aspects analysts said, as quoted by Reuters.

For now, Europe’s natural gas demand continues to be weak after last year’s energy crisis and most of the demand destruction will likely be permanent, according to France’s utility giant Engie.

But analysts and industry professionals told Bloomberg earlier this month that Europe’s gas demand could begin to rise this winter with higher electricity consumption in major markets and easing industrial demand destruction in the Eurozone.

Loading…

 

The post Europe Taps Record-High Natural Gas Storage As Temperatures Drop appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Shell, BP seek US and EU intervention in dispute with Venture Global LNG

Energy News Beat

Energy giants Shell and BP have asked the U.S.-EU Task Force on Energy Security to intervene in a dispute with Venture Global LNG over the launch of commercial operations at the latter’s Calcasieu Pass plant.

Calcasieu Pass produced its first LNG on January 19, 2022, moving from FID to LNG production in 29 months, and the first commissioning cargo left the facility on March 1.

Venture Global said in March this year it has shipped 128 commissioning cargoes from its Calcasieu Pass plant in Louisiana since the first quarter of last year, mostly to Europe.

The company also recently received approval from the US FERC to put in service liquefaction blocks 7-9 at its Calcasieu Pass plant.

All nine blocks of two liquefaction units each will now be in service at the facility.

However, the US firm has not yet declared commercial operations at the facility.

The plant has a capacity to produce 10 mtpa of LNG or 1.3 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d).

Lon-term customers of the facility include Shell, BP, Edison, Repsol, Galp, and PGNiG.

Edison previously said it launched arbitration proceedings in May this year against Venture Global at the LCIA in London, for the failure of LNG deliveries from the Calcasieu Pass plant.

Besides Edison, BP and Shell also reportedly launched arbitration proceedings against Venture Global regarding the delay in LNG cargo deliveries.

President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, and US President, Joe Biden, established the US-EU Task Force on Energy Security in 2022 to boost imports of US LNG to EU and reduce reliance on Russian pipeline gas.

Shell Singapore wrote a letter to the Task Force on October 27 to “express our serious concerns regarding Venture Global’s ongoing misconduct and its impact on our ability to meet critical long-term energy supply needs in European markets,” the firm said.

“In particular, Venture Global’s refusal to place the facility into commercial operation, and begin delivering LNG to Shell and the facility’s other foundation customers pursuant to their long-term supply agreements, will have detrimental consequences on the urgent policy priorities of the US-EU Task Force on Energy Security,” Shell said in the letter signed by Steve Hill, executive VP, Shell Energy.

With long-term purchase commitments from Shell and the other foundation customers in hand, Venture Global was able to fundraise, permit, execute, and construct the project in record time, achieving first cargo in March 2022, more than 20 months ago, the company said.

“Despite Shell’s repeated requests, however, Venture Global has refused to honor the very commitments that undergirded its project in the first place, and declare the start of commercial operations at the facility,” it said.

“Even though publicly available export data confirms that the facility has for many months been reliably producing LNG at nameplate capacity, Venture Global denies that the facility is in commercial operation and refuses to sell any LNG to its foundation customers at contracted prices and volumes for onward delivery to their European buyers,” Shell said.

According to Shell, export data from the US Department of Energy and Kpler indicate that in the year between October 1 , 2022 and September 30, 2023, Venture Global exported 9.96 million of tonnes LNG from the Calcasieu Pass facility.

“Instead, Venture Global has opted to itself sell a steady and continuous flow of “commissioning” cargoes of LNG, to whatever global destinations offer the highest spot market prices, reaping undue revenues of approximately $18 billion, if not more,” Shell said.

“Indeed, the Calcasieu Pass facility’s so-called “commissioning” period defies industry standard,” the company said.

“As Eurogas recently reported in a letter to the European Commission, the nearly 600-day duration of the facility’s “commissioning” period, and the over 200 “commissioning” cargoes exported from the facility during that period, far outstrip the corresponding figures for six other comparable US LNG export facilities,” Shell said.

Shell said that, in all that time, Venture Global has “categorically refused any and all performance of its long-term supply agreements.”

“Moreover, Venture Global’s excuse for this refusal to perform does not withstand scrutiny,” the firm said.

“Although Venture Global has declared “force majeure” on grounds that the facility’s power island is in purported need of repair, regular exports from the facility have nonetheless continued unabated throughout the entire period of claimed “force majeure,” Shell said.

“Indeed, Venture Global even openly affirmed to its principal federal regulator that it will “continue to produce commissioning cargoes of LNG for export” notwithstanding the alleged issues underlying the “force majeure” claim,” Shell said.

“If Venture Global genuinely believed that technical issues prevented commercial operation at Calcasieu Pass, then it would have devoted the necessary resources to promptly rectify those issues so as to start delivering on its long-term contracts,” Shell said.

Instead, Venture Global has “apparently diverted its focus and resources to completing a separate, unrelated export project, and has demonstrated no similar sense of urgency or priority in getting Calcasieu Pass LNG cargoes, at contracted long-term prices and volumes, to gas-strapped European markets,” Shell said.

The company said that Venture Global’s conduct is “also inconsistent with industry and regulatory reports confirming that construction and commissioning work at the facility have long since been completed.”

“It was only this month, for example, that Venture Global sought permission to place the last three liquefaction blocks at the facility into service, even though it concedes that “commissioning operations” with respect to those blocks were completed in July 2022,” Shell said.

“Venture Global fails to explain why it waited over a year to place the remaining liquefaction blocks into service, all the while continuing to sell LNG wherever the spot market price is steepest, without regard to the European gas crisis or the shared policy prerogatives of the European Union and United States to address that crisis,” Shell said.

“In sum, the disparity between the long-term commitments that undergirded Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass project and Venture Global’s refusal to perform them cannot beoverstated,” Shell said.

“If the United States fails to meet its promise of serving as a reliable and affordable supplier of LNG to European buyers, then European states, industries, and ultimately consumerswill only continue to suffer the adverse impacts of constrained supply and price volatility,” Shell said.

“We urge the Task Force to call on Venture Global to cease its unjustifiable and damaging prolongation of “commissioning” at the Calcasieu Pass facility and immediately begin to perform its long-term supply agreement,” Shell concluded.

Edison also wrote a letter to the Task Force on October 26, while BP Gas Marketing sent a letter on October 30.

BP said in the letter signed by Carol Howle, executive VP, trading and shipping, that the company concurs with both Shell and Edison’s letters, which “underscore the ways in which Venture Global, by reneguing on its clear contractual commitments, is undermining the market’s confidence in the reliability of American LNG supply at a critical time for Europe.”

“As cited in Edison’s letter, 200 cargoes have been sold to the short-term market during the so-called “commissioning” period of the facility, far in excess of the norm. None of these cargoes have been delivered under the long-term contracts entered into by BP and other foundation customers,” it said.

“Venture Global’s conduct has shaken confidence in the trustworthiness of American LNG suppliers at a critical time,” BP said.

“It appears that Venture Global is attempting to avoid the regulatory framework that applies to similarly situated LNG terminals in the US exporting reliably at or near nameplate capacity by claiming that repairs scheduled to be completed while continuing in commercial operations should be classified as “commissioning,” BP said.

“BP is one of several industry participants that remains keenly interested in whether Venture Global will be permitted to continue full commercial operations, at or above nameplate capacity, under the standards applicable to facilities under construction and without beginning the time for the facility’s long-term export authorization,” the company said.

“We invite you to consider the harm that this situation is already having on the stability and growth of the LNG industry, both in the Atlantic and globally, and request your support in promoting confidence in the integrity of contractual relations and international norms of business,” BP said.

Venture Global said in a response to these letters dated November 10 that “these communications falsely claim that Venture Global is engaging in misconduct and refusing to honor its contractual commitments to its long-term customers in order to engage in profiteering.”

The firm said this request for interference in the administration of binding and confidential bilateral agreements between commercial entities is “outrageous”.

“It is nothing more than the latest in a series of unsuccessful attempts to bully an industry newcomer into waiving its contractual rights in order to increase their own profits beyond recent record-highs,” Venture Global said.

The letters imply that Venture Global is “undermining confidence” in the US LNG industry, it said.

“To the contrary, our company has been one of the few US (and global) exporters who have successfully financed, commercialized, and built our projects. In short, we have delivered where others have failed, which has been integral to supporting the important work of the Task Force to increase the supply of LNG flowing from the United States,” it said.

“As we have explained to both US and EU officials, our ability to produce LNG early while we incrementally commission the rest of our facility allowed the US to send 10 percent more LNG to Europe, a significant contribution to President Biden’s pledge to the EU,” the company said.

Calcasieu Pass accounts for about 14 bcm at its nameplate and this is nearly the entire 15 bcm that President Biden pledged, Venture Global said.

US Department of Energy data confirms that around 70 percent of all cargoes produced and exported by Venture Global have been delivered into Europe and sold to “multiple” counterparties, including three of its six long-term customers, it said.

“Conversely, while some in their letters disingenuously invoke European energy security as a justification for their complaints, their actions tell a different story,” Venture Global said.

“Motivated by the highest possible profit, the supermajors have traded several of the cargos they have received from Venture Global to places outside of Europe,” the firm said.

“For example: to date, Shell has purchased 7 commissioning cargoes from Venture Global and 3 of them were traded outside of Europe for higher profits. Similarly, BP has purchased 6 commissioning cargoes, and 2 have been traded to destinations outside of Europe,” Venture Global said.

“In addition, from publicly available data, Shell has an abysmal record of failed execution at its own LNG facilities in which they are a major shareholder or a construction leader. As a result, Shell has been and continues to be short by more than 300 cargos of LNG between 2020 and 2026,” according to Venture Global.

“This includes more than 200 cargos of future shorts (beyond November 2023) and presents Shell with a potentially unprecedented shortfall,” the firm said.

“Even though it has no contractual right to do so, we believe Shell is likely targeting Venture Global’s commissioning volumes principally because the replacement cost for its own catastrophic execution mistakes is so high. The reputational damages that Shell faces are extraordinary,” the company said.

“Venture Global is honoring its contractual obligations to its long-term customers in strict conformity with its long-term contracts. The contracts are very clear, which is why our critics are seeking to litigate this through our regulators and in the media,” the company said.

“Under those contracts, which are no different from long-term contracts utilized by other US LNG exporters, the obligations to deliver LNG to the long-term customers have not commenced due to the ongoing commissioning, repair, rectification and completion of the facility,” it said.

“These contractual provisions are unambiguous and unequivocal, and are well understood to industry participants, as well as the financial institutions and investors who lend to or participate in US LNG export projects,” the company said.

“Relying on the commissioning periods at other US LNG export terminals as their benchmark, the long-term customers conclude that the duration of the facility’s relatively longer commissioning period, and the resulting LNG production, means that Venture Global’s obligations to deliver LNG to them must have commenced,” it said.

“This is also untrue. Because it utilizes a first-of-its-kind, midscale modular design model, with eighteen liquefaction trains and independent power and pretreatment modules, Venture Global has been able to produce LNG from parts of the facility during construction, well before commissioning even commenced,” Venture Global said.

“Moreover, its actual commissioning period is demonstrably longer due to the number of components that reflect its modular design. Simply put, there are no other LNG projects in the world against which Venture Global’s commissioning or pre-commercial LNG production can be measured on a like-for-like basis,” it said.

“Even with extended commissioning and delays due to problems beyond our control, we are still producing LNG cargoes and will still take COD faster than most other LNG projects, including Shell Canada which took FID over 61 months ago,” it said.

“As is common with greenfield LNG projects, Venture Global’s facility is experiencing equipment failures and other wearing-in issues that must be resolved before it is sufficiently stable or reliable to meet the delivery obligations that it will owe to its long-term customers,” the company said.

Venture Global said it is “diligently working” toward the full completion of the facility, and the “anticipated schedule for doing so is within (or even ahead of) the typical timeframe for other LNG projects.”

“We have been fully transparent with our long-term customers, federal and state regulators and other stakeholders regarding the challenges faced thus far in reaching that important milestone,” it said.

“Finally, in addition to this letter, we are considering what further actions may be appropriate in light of this highly coordinated attack on our business and reputation by European energy industry heavyweights seeking to use their market power to modify their contracts and stifle competition in global LNG liquefaction,” the company said.

 

The post Shell, BP seek US and EU intervention in dispute with Venture Global LNG appeared first on Energy News Beat.