REX - Regional Express

OUTThere Magazine l April 2013

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miningreview executive director and chief economist Professor Quentin Grafton. The price of natural gas in the US has dropped substantially over the past five years, and buyers in Europe and Asia – markets with separate pricing models – will be looking to North America as it gears up to become an exporter. Coal producers in the US have already started selling to Europe as domestic orders from buyers who are transferring to gas as an energy source drop away. "There is potential for US exports [to Asia], probably beginning in 2015, and there's the implication of that for gas prices in the Asia-Pacific region," Professor Grafton says. As Australian LNG projects under construction are made feasible by contracts for future sales to Asian buyers, the possibility of US supply is troubling. In North America sophisticated domestic infrastructure export plants are being built on Canada's west coast and along the Gulf of Mexico, Professor Grafton says. Asia's gas price is the most expensive in the world while America's gas price is the lowest. "That leads to the expectation that there will be LNG exports out of the US and Canada," he says. Changes are afoot in China as well, with Chatham House, a London-based think tank, reporting last year that Chinese state-owned companies have been directed to find twice the nation's 2008 import volume in gas from coal bed methane and shale by 2015. Still, there's no need to panic, Grafton says. The $200 billion in LNG projects under construction is committed. "That money will be spent," he says. "The projects are essentially a done deal." As for 57

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