Engro: Pakistan’s first LNG import terminal received 74 vessels last year

Engro Elengy Terminal, the operator of Pakistan’s first FSRU-based LNG import terminal, received 74 vessels at the facility in Port Qasim last year, according to co-owner Engro.

The 150,900-cbm FSRU Exquisite, owned by Qatari LNG shipping giant Nakilat and US floating player Excelerate Energy, serves the facility.

It started working at Engro Elengy Terminal, a joint venture of Engro and Dutch storage tank firm Vopak, back in 2015 and completed its 400th ship-to-ship operation in October 2021.

The terminal has the capacity for regasification of up to a peak of 690 mmscfd or some 4.8 mtpa.

“Engro Elengy Terminal (Pvt) Limited handled 74 vessels during 2022 versus 72 vessels in 2021, delivering 219 bcf of regasified LNG into the SSGC network with an availability factor of 97.6 percent,” Engro said in its yearly results report.

According to the company, the LNG terminal contributed 15 percent of Pakistan’s total gas supply during the year.

Besides Exquisite, Port Qasim also hosts FSRU BW integrity that serves Pakistan’s second FSRU-based terminal under a long-term charter deal with Pakistan GasPort.

The country imported about 6.9 million tons of LNG in 2022, compared to 8.2 million tons in 2021, according to Kpler data.

Pakistan gets most of its supplies under long-term contracts from Qatar and on the spot market.

However, last year prices surged and Europe took most of the available spot supplies.

In October last year, state-owned Pakistan LNG received no offers for a tender seeking bids for a total of 72 LNG shipments to fuel the country’s power plants. The firm did not launch any tenders since then, its website shows.

Pakistan LNG’s five-year deal with trader Gunvor for one cargo per month expired in July last year. The company also has a deal with Italy’s Eni until 2032.

Asian spot prices dropped considerably this year and the JKM LNG spot price for April is currently trading below $15/MMBtu.

A recent report by Reuters suggests that Pakistan plans to quadruple its domestic coal-fired capacity to reduce power generation costs and would not build new gas-fired plants in the coming years due to high LNG prices.

The agency cited Pakistan’s Energy Minister Khurram Dastgir as saying that “LNG is no longer part of the long-term plan”, and that the country plans to increase domestic coal-fired power capacity to 10 gigawatts (GW) in the medium-term, from 2.31 GW currently.

Most Popular

Chevron pens Western Australian gas supply deal with Alinta

Chevron’s Australian unit has signed a new long-term deal with Alinta Energy to deliver domestic natural gas from its Gorgon and Wheatstone LNG projects and the Woodside-led NWS JV.
spot_img

More News Like This

Pakistan launches spot LNG tender

State-owned Pakistan LNG has released a new tender inviting firms to submit bids for one spot liquefied natural gas shipment for delivery next week to meet the country's gas requirements amid disruptions caused by the ongoing Middle East crisis.

BP to supply another spot LNG cargo to Pakistan

A unit of UK-based energy giant BP has submitted the lowest bid in a tender to supply Pakistan with one spot LNG shipment this week.

Pakistan launches fresh spot LNG tender

State-owned Pakistan LNG has released a new tender inviting firms to submit bids for one spot liquefied natural gas shipment.

Eemshaven LNG capacity nearly booked up to 2036

Firms have booked the majority of the regasification capacities at the FSRU-based LNG import facility in the Dutch port of Eemshaven, owned by Gasunie and Vopak, for the period 2028-2036, as part of the planned extension of the terminal's operations beyond 2027.