Middle East’s Largest Import Terminal for Liquefied Natural Gas

Kuwait aims to open what will be the Middle East’s largest import terminal for liquefied natural gas. The Al-Zour plant will allow Kuwait to receive 22 million tons of LNG (about 31 billion cubic metres) a year, almost doubling the region’s capacity. The LNG market is expected to grow quickly in the next few decades as countries shift from oil and coal to cleaner energy. The global trade in LNG will probably increase to more than 1,000 bcm annually by 2035 from roughly 425 bcm today, according to BP.

Kuwait is one of the world’s biggest oil exporters, shipping almost 2 million barrels a day, but pumps relatively little gas. The OPEC member produced 18.4 bcm of gas in 2019 and consumed 23.5 bcm, BP said in a report. It was the Middle East’s biggest importer last year and the 14th globally. The government is yet to decide whether it will keep a vessel currently used to receive LNG – a floating storage and re-gasification unit called Golar Igloo with a capacity of 5.8 million tons per a year – after the new terminal starts. Kuwait Integrated Petroleum Industries Co, a unit of state energy firm Kuwait Petroleum Corp, is responsible for selecting a company to operate and maintain Al-Zour for five years, and may make a decision in the coming weeks, said one of the people. Greek gas-grid operator Desfa is the only company to have submitted an offer.

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