Skip to main content

Urgent action on LNG exports called for

Hydrocarbon Engineering,


Rob Franklin, President of ExxonMobil Gas & Power Marketing Company has said that the US is at risk of losing economic opportunity and the ability to solidify its role as a global leader in energy production unless the government moves to approve LNG exports. In a speech at the John Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington D.C., Franklin said “if policymakers don’t revisit and redress some significant legal and regulatory problems…then the US could be left behind during one of the great, historic developments in global energy and trade.”

The US has long embraced open and free markets. Free trade benefits Americans in the form of more choices, higher wages, and better jobs. Franklin said that the export of LNG should be treated no differently from other exports such as agricultural goods, automobiles and computer products. Franklin said, “LNG exports can provide the spur to further increase America’s natural gas production, providing all the attendant benefits that would generate.”

“If we are serious about having a US LNG industry and capturing the tremendous opportunities in front of us then we need to ensure that the case of LNG exports does not become just another casualty of bureaucracy,” Franklin said.

Global LNG demand is expected to triple between 2010 and 2040 and to put this into perspective, it means that the amount of incremental gas needed to meet global demand by 2025 will be almost double the size of the entire US gas market today. Most of the new demand for LNG will come from existing and emerging markets in the Asia Pacific as well as the Middle East.

Franklin also noted that the February 2015 report by the President’s Council of Economic Advisors concludes that LNG exports would increase US GDP, create jobs, promote cleaner energy worldwide, while maintaining the competitive cost advantage for manufacturers. He also cited various other studies, which have generally reached the same conclusion that allowing LNG exports would benefit the American economy, and the greater the level of exports, the greater the benefit.

From an environmental perspective natural gas is the cleanest burning conventional fuel. When used for power generation it emits up to 60% less greenhouse emissions than coal, which have helped return emissions levels in the US to where they were in the 1990s, despite the fact that the US economy is six times larger now than it was then. The export of LNG will help manage emissions and the risk of global climate change.


Edited from press release by Claira Lloyd

Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/gas-processing/21042015/us-lng-export-action/

You might also like

 
 

Embed article link: (copy the HTML code below):