Australia grabs world's biggest LNG exporter crown from Qatar in Nov
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Australia overtook Qatar as the world’s largest exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG) for the first time in November, data showed.
The surge in Australian exports follows the start up of a number of export projects in the country over the past three years, most recently the Ichthys project offshore its northern coast.
In November, Australia loaded 6.5 million tonnes of LNG for exports while Qatar exported over 6.2 million tonnes, the data showed.
“It may have come later and at higher cost than originally envisaged, but Australia has taken the crown,” said Saul Kavonic, energy analyst at Credit Suisse in Sydney.
Australia will further cement its top position as the final new project in the pipeline, Royal Dutch Shell’s Prelude, comes online by next year, though Qatar will not stay idle, said Sanford Bernstein analyst Neil Beveridge.
Qatar plans to boost its LNG capacity by early 2024 to 110 million tonnes a year, up from its current production of 77 million tonnes a year, by adding a fourth LNG production line.
Qatar, which also exports around 600,000 barrels per day of crude oil, said earlier this month it would leave the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to focus on gas.
Wood Mackenzie analyst Nicholas Browne said the drop in Qatari LNG exports in November was due to maintenance, making Australia’s time at the top limited.
“We are expecting this to be temporary and that Qatar will likely produce 6.5 million tonnes in December, meaning it will again be the largest exporter,” he said.
“We expect Australia will regain the role of largest exporter from summer 2019, when Ichthys and Prelude have fully ramped up.”
However, Australia’s hold on the top spot could be fairly short as LNG exports are being blamed for rising domestic gas prices, which has become a political issue in the country.
“The reality is Australia will only keep this title for a few years before Qatar retakes the crown, and in the longer term it will likely be a U.S. versus Qatar story for top spot with Australia in third place,” said Credit Suisse’s Kavonic.
Reporting by Jessica Jaganathan; Editing by Henning Gloystein and Christian Schmollinger
- Freeport LNG export plant in Texas reports shutdown of liquefaction train
- TotalEnergies and Mozambique announce the full restart of the $20-B Mozambique LNG project
- Five energy market trends to track in 2026, the year of the glut
- RWE strengthens partnerships with ADNOC and Masdar to enhance energy security in Germany and Europe
- Venture Global wins LNG arbitration case brought by Spain's Repsol

Comments