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Monday, April 26, 2010

Gas is running Out, do we have solutions?


Energy crises is the most dangerous crises! The Middle East needs to solve the conundrum which sees it sitting on 40 percent of the world’s gas reserves and yet suffering from a supply shortage, a senior Royal Dutch Shell executive said on Monday.

Natural gas demand in the region was growing at such a rate that by 2015, total consumption in the Mideast would be close to that in major European economies, Malcolm Brinded, Shell’s executive director for international upstream, said in a speech at an industry event.

Middle East gas demand was rising at around 5 percent per year, a similar rate to growth in China, he added.

“Domestic demand is growing, fueled by economic growth, low gas prices and a gradual switch from oil to gas for power generation. As a result, some Middle East countries face natural gas shortages,” Brinded said.


The region could explore using new technology and investing in LNG infrastructure as it looked to meet gas demand, Brinded said.

While global gas markets suffer a glut, the only country in the Gulf with gas to spare is Qatar. The rest of the region would burn more if it could.

In February, OPEC-member Kuwait signed a five-year service contract with Shell to develop pure gas fields in the country’s north. The Gulf Arab state plans to increase output from the gas fields to 1 billion cubic feet per day (cfd) from around 140 million cfd.

Kuwait, like its neighbors, has seen gas demand for power generation and industry rise on a petrodollar-fueled boom.

Shell signed a deal in June 2009 to supply Kuwait, one of the world’s highest per capita consumers of electricity, with gas to feed its power generation stations during the summer.

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