By Mohi Narayan
BENGALURU (Reuters) – Bangladesh will buy 10-12 spot LNG cargoes between February and June if prices soften further, an energy adviser to the prime minister told Reuters on Monday, in a reversal of a government decision last year to halt spot purchases after prices spiked.
“This is a high demand season for us. Ramadan is coming, this is also irrigation season, therefore, if market softens, we will buy 10-12 more spot LNG cargoes,” Bir Bikram Tawfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury said on the sidelines of the India Energy Week.
Bangladesh issued a spot tender to buy a liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargo recently after LNG prices plunged more than 70% from August’s record of $70.50/mmBtu.
“We are looking at below $20 price for spot cargoes,” Chowdhury added, to cater to domestic demand which is going to rise in the coming months.
The South Asian nation depends on imported natural gas for about three-quarters of its power generation, but was forced to ration gas supplies last year as global prices were driven up by Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Chowdhury said European sanctions on Russia which push LNG prices up are discriminatory in nature for countries like Bangladesh, which are unable to secure LNG supplies due to high prices.
Asian spot LNG prices last week were $19.50 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), the first time they have fallen below $20 since September 2021, as inventories remain high with peak winter demand due to end soon.
Bangladesh currently imports about 300 million-400 million cubic feet of LNG daily through a 10-year import deal with Oman and a 15-year import deal with Qatar.
“We had sent a delegation to negotiate a deal with Brunei LNG but they will be supplying 2025 onwards if that materializes,” Chowdhury said.
(Reporting by Mohi Narayan, writing by Tanvi Mehta; Editing by Krishna N. Das and Mark Potter)