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GEOPOLITICS OF NATURAL GAS
An Analysis of Prospective Developments in
the Natural Gas Trade and the Geopolitical Implications
The James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy of Rice University
The Stanford Program on Energy and Sustainable Development
Sections
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Natural gas is rapidly
gaining in geopolitical importance. Gas
has grown from a marginal fuel consumed in regionally disconnected
markets to a fuel that is transported across great distances for
consumption in many different economic sectors. Increasingly, natural
gas is the fuel of choice for consumers seeking its relatively low
environmental impact, especially for electric power generation. As
a result, world gas consumption is projected to more than double
over the next three decades, rising from 23% to 28% of world total
primary energy demand by 2030 and surpassing coal as the world's
number two energy source and potentially overtaking oil's share in
many large industrialized economies.[1]
Gas consumption is projected to grow in nearly all
world regions, with the largest absolute increases in gas use in
North America and Europe and rapid growth in new markets such as
China, South Asia and Latin America.[2] It is likely that rising gas consumption
in many of these markets will force an increase in imported supplies
as low-cost local resources are exhausted. Three countries alone-Russia,
Iran, and Qatar-possess 55% of current proved gas reserves.[3] Simultaneously, falling costs for
transporting gas-both by pipeline and by ship as liquefied natural
gas (LNG)-will continue to improve the viability for these distant
suppliers to develop markets outside their borders.
The growing importance
of natural gas imports to modern economies will force new thinking
about energy security. The
relationships that are developing between major gas suppliers and
key end use consuming countries will create new geopolitical considerations
that will rise to the highest levels of economic and security policy. Already,
U.S. Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Alan Greenspan has publicly discussed
the implications of rising domestic gas prices and the need for LNG
imports to supplement North American gas production. Security agencies
have redoubled their attention to gas transportation infrastructures. With
the prospect of much greater dependence on foreign supplies of natural
gas, the U.S. Department of Energy in December 2003 convened a gathering
of the Energy Ministers from current and future major gas exporters
to the U.S. to build diplomatic ties to these important suppliers.
The Energy Forum of the
James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy and the Program
on Energy and Sustainable Development
at the Stanford University Institute for International Studies have
begun a major effort to investigate the geopolitical consequences
of a major shift to natural gas in world energy markets. The study,
to be completed in 2004 culminating with an edited book volume on
the subject, is aimed to fill the gap in the academic and business
literature on natural gas. Earlier studies have given particular
attention to the perspective of investors, with much less attention
to the broader consequences of the shift to gas.
A case in point of recent efforts to look at infrastructure
development is the recently completed World Bank (ESMAP) study Cross-Border
Oil and Gas Pipelines: Problems and Prospects. This study
briefly examines twelve cases of cross-border energy infrastructures
to identify common challenges and the best practices for mitigating
these challenges.[4] The
International Energy Agency (IEA) has convened a series of workshops
on cross-border gas trade, including
policy makers, industry experts and academics and continues to examine
issues of gas import security.[5]
There is also a voluminous literature on hypothetical gas
transport projects-lines drawn with crayon on maps that represent
hundreds of proposed gas lines. Some studies such as the Shell
Global Scenarios, have considered gas infrastructure expansion
in the broadest social and geopolitical contexts.[6] Still
other efforts have focused on the specific economics of hypothetical natural
gas pipeline options in particular regions. In 2000 the Asia Pacific Energy Research
Center published two reports-one focused on the economics of gas
pipeline options in Northeast Asia and a second on gas pipeline options
for Southeast Asia.[7] Similarly,
the Baker Institute at Rice University has analyzed the pipeline
and LNG options for importing gas from the Russian Far East to Japan.[8] The
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis has also conducted
a large-scale economic modeling effort to study the routing of Central
Asian natural gas to European and Asian markets.[9] Every
major commercial enterprise that produces, transports or sells gas
across borders enlists models
to explore the economics of different projects and scenarios.
The Baker Institute-Stanford
University effort will expand on this existing work. In particular,
we shall consider the
more complex issues of the international security and geopolitical
consequences of emerging gas producer-consumer relationships. We
will explore the political consequences of integrating what have
historically been disconnected regional natural gas markets. The
study will allow examination of whether the advent of LNG will create
a truly global market for natural gas, as well as the role of likely
key gas suppliers in affecting prices and security of supply in that
global market. The study will also allow for systematic analysis
of many questions that have long been a mainstay of the energy security
debate in oil, such as the whether large gas consuming countries
will compete to secure uninterrupted access to the world's most prolific
natural gas resources.
The study will utilize historical case studies as
well as advanced economic modeling to examine the interplay between
economic and political factors in the development of natural gas
resources; our aim is to shed light on the political challenges that
may accompany a shift to a gas-fed world.
Supporting Documents
Historical Case Studies
Construction of infrastructure is a major challenge
to increased world natural gas consumption. Cumulative investments
in the global natural gas supply chain of $3.1 trillion, or $105
billion per year, will be needed to meet rising demand for gas between
2001 and 2030, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). Seven
case studies focus on the special challenges of investing in large-scale,
long-distance gas production and transportation infrastructures. These
projects, especially pipelines, require dedicating capital resources
to projects that are fixed to the ground-immobile, yet requiring
decades of operation to recover the initial investment. These studies
concentrate on countries that do not have the long histories of cooperation
and the stable legal and political environments that are often seen
as essential to attracting private investors. The expansion of gas
as a global fuel depends in large part on success in attracting investment
within such political, institutional and economic environments. The
studies examine the factors that explain why these projects were
built and why alternative viable projects stalled (see Table 1).
Historical Case Studies of
Cross-Border Gas Trade Infrastructures |
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| Case Study |
Author(s) |
1. Liquefied Natural Gas from Indonesia:
The Arun project
|
Steven W. Lewis and Fred von
der Mehden
Rice University |
2. Gas
for Europe from North Africa:
The Transmed and Maghreb projects |
Mark Hayes
Stanford University |
3. Russian
gas exports to Europe:
The Yamal project through Belarus and Poland |
David Victor and Nadejda Victor,
Stanford University |
| 4. Gas
Trade in the Southern Cone |
David Mares
University of California San Diego |
5. International
Gas in Central Asia:
Turkmenistan, Iran, Russia and Afghanistan |
Martha Olcott
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |
6. Liquefied Natural Gas from Qatar:
The Qatargas project |
Kohei Hashimoto
Institute
for New International Political Systems |
7. Liquefied
Natural Gas from Trinidad and Tobago:
The Atlantic LNG project |
Rob Shepherd and James Ball
Gas Strategies Ltd. |
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The project has developed a detailed research
protocol to guide the case study teams. Although each case study examines
a complex story in its own right, the protocol ensures comparability
across cases on key issues, notably:
- Creation of demand. In many cases
new export projects deliver large quantities of gas to markets
that do not already have the infrastructure in place to make use
of the new resource. The case studies examine the instruments
used to "create" demand-such as facilitating complementary investments
in gas-using equipment that are essential to economically viable
projects
- Changing market context. The time
and geographic span of the seven case studies allows assessment
of how market liberalization and a shift from state projects to
an increased role for the private sector affect investment in cross-border
gas projects. The studies also allow examination of the impacts
due to the shift from oil-indexed gas pricing to gas-on-gas competition.
- Long-term contracts. Investors and
gas suppliers have historically worked under long-term take-or-pay
contracts. The shift to more market-oriented arrangements makes
the process of contracting more complex, which can slow or impede
efforts to finalize projects. Each study looks at the particular
roles for such contracts and their enforceability; the studies
explore where such contracts have been essential (and why), or
whether they serve as a superficial vehicle for securing financing.
- Transit country risks. Investors and
hosts alike have been particularly concerned about the risk that
transit countries will extort additional revenues or interrupt
supplies. Three of the case studies involve transit countries,
allowing for analysis of transit risk and the strategies adopted
to mitigate this risk in a range of contexts.
- The Gas Weapon. Importing
countries have long feared that suppliers will withhold gas for
economic or political gain. Each case study examines whether this
problem has arisen and how such fears were ameliorated.
- LNG vs. pipeline. In some cases,
both LNG and pipeline projects have been available to export gas
at comparable cost. In those instances, the case studies will
provide insights into the factors, in addition to cost, that affect
the choice of gas transport technologies.
- International Institutions.
Theory suggests that pre-existing institutions for economic cooperation
would facilitate
the completeion of large, sunk-cost investments between countries
joined by such agreements. The studies span country pairs that
share membership in regional trade agreements, and countries with
limited pre-existing
formal cooperation. The cases also examine the role of international
financial institutions in advancing these projects.
Economic Modeling
Simultaneous to the analyses
of historical case studies, a group of scholars at Rice University
is currently developing
an economic model of global natural gas markets. The model is being
created to simulate the development of global gas markets based on
solely commercial considerations of available supply and its development
costs, the cost of capital, end-use demand by sector, and fuel competition.[11] Specifically, the dynamic spatial
general equilibrium model seeks a level of development of gas resources
and consuming markets, and a set of transportation routes such that
no trades can be made spatially or temporally to produce a more efficient
outcome. Natural gas resources are developed based on their current
and future economic rents (a Hotelling-type approach to depletable
resource development, but taking account also of changing costs as
resources are depleted). Each resource must compete against all
other potential resources serving regionally discrete end-use markets.
Thus, heterogeneity in development costs and resource size, as well
as transportation costs and distance to market, are extremely important
factors in determining which resources are used first. Furthermore,
the return to capital for different transportation options and associated
production facilities (such as liquefaction and re-gasification plants)
will determine whether the resource moves by pipeline, LNG tanker,
or simply not at all. In fact, it is possible that isolated resources
with a low cost of extraction will not be developed due to the cost
of transporting them to market.
Data for the resource
base is taken from the United States Geologic Survey's (USGS) World Resource Assessments for natural
gas. The model under development will be the first to examine the
economic implications of the monumental geological research effort
undertaken by the USGS. Data for the estimated costs of developing
and extracting those resources was developed under the CRADA between
Altos Management Partners and the USGS. Pipeline and LNG value chain
costs are taken from multiple sources, which will be outlined in
the study.
Demand and supply are
characterized regionally, with greater detail in certain areas. For example, North America
is divided into more than 50 regions. Russia and the Former Soviet
Union are separated into more than 15 regions. Most other demand
sinks or supply sources are aggregated to the country level. Remaining
exceptions include other producing or consuming countries with substantial
natural gas infrastructure, or countries such as China that are expected
to play an increasingly important role in world energy markets over
the next few decades. Regions with little infrastructure and relatively
small potential impact are aggregated in order to reduce the computational
burden. In some cases, insufficient data made a disaggregated analysis
impossible.
The economic model under
development at Rice University also incorporates research on the
relationship between energy and
economic development, which was acknowledged by the International
Association for Energy Economics with its 2001 Best Paper prize. Accordingly,
energy intensity is allowed to decline at different rates in each
end-use sector as per capita income rises. Demand elasticities with
respect to income, own-price, population, weather, and alternative
fuel prices are estimated using historical data from the International
Energy Agency (IEA). These are used to determine the share of natural
gas used in each end-use sector. Thus, economic growth, population
growth, and the relative price of competing fuels will determine
the extent to which natural gas demand grows in different end-use
sectors in different countries throughout the world.
The Rice model will illustrate
how global gas markets may develop over the coming 30 years and
predict, under certain conditions,
the future supply sources for natural gas to various end-use markets. The
model can also be constrained to show the consequences of certain
political interventions, such as a loss of Russian supply due to
bureaucratic inefficiency, the interruption of new project development
by the formation of a producer cartel, and other similar events.
Integration
The historical case studies
and the global economic modeling described above are both valuable
stand-alone research. However,
the study seeks to push forward to integrate political and institutional
insights from the case studies into the economic model of world gas
markets. Key factors such the impact of political risk on the pace
of project development and the intervention of international financial
institutions will be allowed to influence new project development. Such
factors often determine which projects are built first; such first
moves, in turn, condition the market's future development. This
study will break new ground by going beyond the typical economic
optimization model framework to incorporate political and institutional
realities and a freer range of non-economic possibilities for gas
trade development.
Scenarios will be developed
from the synthesis of macro-level and regional insights from the
case studies. The modeling
team and case study authors are now working together to develop various
applications of the model that will highlight the interaction of
economic and political forces; these will be used to "shock" the
base case economic model:
- Politics and Economics: the
1990s. We will calibrate the model to 1990 conditions
and then run it for the period 1990 to 2003 using just technoeconomic variables,
such as capital and operating costs of projects, gas reserves, and transportation
distance. We will then compare the results for the "optimal" run with
the real outcomes-the projects actually built in the 1990s. The modeling
and case study teams, working together, will aim to explain the differences
between the optimal and real outcomes. We will focus on ways to incorporate
political, institutional and legal variables into the model so that an
embellished model better reflects this wider range of factors at work. We
may prepare special runs in which we "layer" these additional variables-for
example, adding indicators of political and investor risk to existing cost
structures-to explore the sensitivity of outcomes to these factors.
- Making a market: the case of
China. The first drafts of the case studies
have revealed that some countries have "made" a market for gas with explicit
policy interventions. Examples include Japan in the aftermath of the Arab
oil embargo and the Soviet Union with the creation of a twenty-year gas
policy in the 1950s. The World Bank and national governments have also
attempted to create markets for gas in several key South American countries. From
these historical examples we are learning about the rates of change and
the roles of key projects in "making a market;" these factors tend not
to be reflected in existing economic models because they are explicit policy
interventions, often pursued as "grand projects" with a governmental hand
that does not follow a narrow economic path. China is already attempting
to create such a market with the West-East pipeline project and a few LNG
projects, but creation of a much larger market requires politically more
challenging tasks-bringing gas from Russia (across or around Mongolia),
allowing vast imports of LNG from politically unstable countries (e.g.,
Indonesia), displacing coal (and jobs), etc. Many of the challenges for
Chinese policy arise not just from the higher short-term cost of gas (compared
with coal) but also Chinese notions of energy security, which are often
used to block energy import projects. We are using these insights to develop
2-3 storylines for possible creation of a gas market in China and to explore
the consequences for regional and world gas markets with the WGTM.
- Internal
Reform: the role of state-owned enterprises. Nearly
all the major gas exporting countries have built gas sectors
that
are dominated by state-owned
enterprises (SOEs). This poses possible challenges for technoeconomic
models. On the one hand, SOEs are integrated monopolies that
can adopt a long-term perspective that is consistent with the
long-run optimization framework that is often used in large scale
energy models. On the other hand, SOEs are often highly dysfunctional
entities-inefficient in their operations and often seized by
the state to perform special functions, such as building large
(often uneconomic) trophy projects. Often the state seizes large
amounts of the SOE's revenues for general budgetary purposes,
which leaves the SOE unable to spend on long-term capital projects. (Similar
patterns are evident in the electric sector, where Stanford's
PESD has devoted much research attention in recent years.) To
date, the implications of this internal organization of the gas
sector has not been examined in models. We will develop storylines
that will explore the implications using one key SOE as the example: Gazprom. We
will examine the implications for Western European regional gas
markets of alternative pathways in Gazprom reform. One storyline
examines the consequences of not reforming Gazprom; a second
looks at marginal reforms that create space for outside investors
in large projects (e.g., the Yamal peninsula gas fields). A
third storyline looks at classic "common carrier" reform that
would transform Gazprom into a pipeline company with enforceable
open access rules that would encourage other firms to supply
large quantities of gas from Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan (and
a lesser degree Uzbekistan) as well as prodigious quantities
of associated gas from oil operations (most of which is presently
not transported from oil fields). In each case, we examine the
implications for key markets (e.g., Europe) and for global gas
markets (via price formation in LNG markets).
Finally, the case studies and the modeling efforts
will help to frame a discussion of the contours of the world gas
market over the next three decades and its implications for political
relations between nations-especially nations that will be required
to build and operate costly, shared gas infrastructures. We also
will examine whether key gas suppliers could form a cartel-a "gas
OPEC." More broadly, attention will be given an investigation of
whether market power will flow to port-accessible buyers or to major
producers with spare capacities.
Applications
Our goal is not only to
explain the past with greater precision but also to look at possible
futures in the shift to gas. We
aim to develop visions for a future gas economy that are more firmly
rooted in a realistic assessment of the political and institutional
factors that have a large impact on investment in infrastructures
and thus on the pace and character of the unfolding gas revolution. Although
we focus on the political and institutional factors that will shape
this gas transition, we also aim to speculate on the political consequences of
a shift to gas. We expect that the shift to gas will bind nations
together more tightly as more countries will be forced to build and
operate shared infrastructures.
The study will conclude
with two major products. First,
the study team will prepare an edited book volume that will integrate
the results and present, in one place, all the major findings. (A
draft outline for the book is attached.) Second, the team will host
a major conference that will bring together policy analysts, industry,
and government representatives. We will present results from the
study and focus a dialogue on the long-term implications of a gas-intensive
world. This capstone conference will be held at Rice University
in Houston, Texas on May 26-27, 2004.
Further information on
the Geopolitics of Natural Gas study, including meeting notes and
presentations of initial results,
is available at: http://pesd.stanford.edu/gas.
[9] G. Klaasen, A. McDonald and J. Zhao, "The Future
of Gas Infrastructures in Eurasia." Energy Policy (2000)
vol. 29: 399-413
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