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LONDON: Global imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) grew 4.5% in 2021 from the previous year, supported by a surge in post-COVID industrial demand, especially in China, according to the Paris-based International Group of LNG Importers.

Global LNG import volumes reached 372.3 million tonnes, a rise of 16.2 million tonnes from 2020, the GIIGNL said in an annual report. The industry grew only by 0.4% during 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the recovery in 2021 still lagged the pre-pandemic growth of 13% growth in 2019 and 8.3% in 2018, according to GIIGNL's previous annual reports.

"In 2021, natural gas markets were characterized by persistent supply constraints and fast recovering demand, which put strong upward pressure on LNG prices," said GIIGNL president, Jean Abiteboul.

"The looming price volatility has been exacerbated by the Russia-Ukraine conflict and the current European energy crisis proves to be a stark reminder of LNG’s vital role in ensuring energy security and economic stability," he added.

The GIIGNL comprises 84 member companies headquartered in 27 countries, who account for more than 90% of global LNG trade.

Asia, supported by China, led imports, attracting a 73.2% share of global imports.

Imports grew by 7.1% in 2021 to 272.5 million tonnes. Robust economic recovery in China and cold temperatures helped it record the world's highest growth rate of imported volumes at 15%, or a total of 79.3 million tonnes by the end of last year.

Price differential

During most of 2021, the high price differential between the benchmark LNG price known as the Japan Korea Marker and the benchmark European gas price at the Dutch TTF hub, helped attract more LNG volumes to Asia.

However, the balance started to shift towards Europe in the last quarter of 2021, as the continent imported large volumes of LNG to fill storage and meet demand for heating in the winter season that runs from October to April.

Vitol offers Pakistan LNG at $23.13/mmbtu for May 17-18 spot cargo

According to Refinitiv data, Europe hit a new record for LNG imports in April at over 12 million tonnes, breaking January's level that exceeded 10 million tonnes.

The GIIGNL report said that due to geopolitical tensions, risks of energy shortages and price volatility, last year saw a strong return of long-term contracts, while spot deals declined to 136.3 million tonnes in 2021, representing 36.6% of total trade, versus 40% in 2020.

For Europe to be able to secure more volumes of LNG to phase out Russian gas, it will need to sign long term contracts as well.

"Given the rising LNG needs, we need more molecules, but also more import capacity. This requires strong policy signals, long-term customer commitments as well as help on the permitting side," said Vincent Demoury, General Delegate at GIIGNL. "European buyers are hesitant to commit and need government support to mitigate the risks and enable new investments."

The year also saw growth in re-exported LNG, with volumes hitting 3.5 million tonnes compared with 2.6 million tonnes in 2020.

Spain led the list of re-exporting LNG in Europe, followed by France and the Netherlands. In the United States, imports grew by 49.8% helped by a ramp up of five large liquefaction plants.

Europe attracted most of LNG exports during 2022.

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