Pakistan to import cheaper LNG from Azerbaijan

ISLAMABAD – Announcing a deal that will see Azerbaijan provide Pakistan with one LNG cargo per month, the Pakistani government has issued two tenders seeking spot liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes for the first time in nearly a year.

Pakistan is dependent on gas for power generation and running short of foreign exchange to pay for imports. It has struggled to procure spot cargoes of LNG after global prices spiked last year following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, causing widespread power outages.

Asian spot LNG prices have eased this year from a record high of $70/mmBtu hit in August to below $10 at this time.

Pakistan LNG, a government subsidiary that procures LNG from the international market, has one tender seeking six cargoes on a delivered-ex-ship (DES) basis to Port Qasim in Karachi in October and December, according to the tenders posted online.

The delivery windows are Oct. 5-6, 20-21 and 31, and Dec. 7-8, 13-14 and 24-25. The tender will close on June 20.

Pakistan LNG’s second tender seeks three cargoes, also on DES basis to Port Qasim, for delivery windows of January 3-4, 28-29 and February 23-24. The second tender closes on July 14.

Pakistan LNG last issued a tender seeking 10 spot cargoes in July 2022, but it received no offers.

In a related development on Tuesday, Pakistan’s petroleum minister Musadik Malik told a news conference that Azerbaijan will supply an LNG cargo every month to Pakistan at a “cheaper price.”

He did not share details on the supply deal, but said that a contract had already been signed with Azerbaijan and that it will “start soon.”

After oil, first Russian LPG consignment reaches Pakistan via Afghanistan 

Pakistan has two long-term supply deals with Qatar, one signed in 2016 for 3.75 million metric tons of LNG a year, and another signed in 2021 for 3 million metric tons a year.

It also has an annual portfolio contract with ENI for 0.75 million metric tons a year.

In 2022, Pakistan’s imports of LNG slowed to 6.93 million metric tons for the year, down from 8.23 million metric tons in 2021, according to data from data analytics group Kpler.

More from this category

Advertisment

Advertisment

Follow us on Facebook

Search