Why plain old natural gas is the hottest thing at the 'Super Bowl' of energy

Why plain old natural gas is the hottest thing at the ‘Super Bowl’ of energy


At a Texas energy conference that features some of the field’s most innovative technology (scrubbing carbon from the skies and the race to build the world’s first fusion power plant, for example) — this year, people can’t stop talking about plain old natural gas. 

The world’s appetite for liquified natural gas (LNG) is expected to grow 40 per cent in the next five years, according to S&P Global, a financial information and analytics company. Natural gas hasn’t historically been a hit with environmentalists, but executives say it’s seeing greater demand and believe it will play a role in meeting a worldwide need for stable electricity and helping countries shift away from coal.

“Practicality and pragmatism will always win out,” said Tengku Muhammad Taufik, CEO of Malaysia’s multinational oil and gas company Petronas.

The commodity has a new lustre these days, thanks in part to the rise of AI. Data centres, which store computer systems and servers, suck up enormous amounts of electricity that needs to be available all hours of the day. Tech giants have cast a wide net to look for different energy sources to power data centres — including hydrogen, geothermal and nuclear power — and energy industry observers predict natural gas will be a big part of the mix, at least in the short term.

A woman in a red blazer speaks onstage as part of a panel discussion.
Meg O’Neill, CEO of Woodside Energy, seen at the CERAWeek conference in Houston, says she’s bullish on North American natural gas. (Grant Miller Photography)

“Data centres and AI are energy hogs,” Meg O’Neill, CEO of Australian oil and gas company Woodside Energy, told CBC News. “We ask ourselves, ‘What’s the energy source that’s going to be most flexible to be able to meet that energy demand?’ And we think LNG will play an even more important role.”

Concerns around energy security, particularly in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has also spurred demand. O’Neill said buyers are returning to the table and asking for long-term LNG contracts.

“Last year, we signed 10-year deals with leading industrial players in Japan, Korea and Taiwan,” she said. “They know that they’re going to need LNG as part of their energy mix, and they want the price certainty.”

A man wearing a blue suit with a French flag pin makes an energetic gesture while speaking during a panel at CERA Week, a major energy conference.
Patrick Pouyanné, CEO of TotalEnergies, told a CERAWeek audience that he believes natural gas can play a role in helping countries transition away from coal. (Grant Miller Photography)

LNG will be ‘core’ of energy transition, exec says 

Patrick Pouyanné, CEO of the French multinational energy company TotalEnergies, told an audience in Houston that gas-fired power plants can also help transition countries off coal. According to data and analytics firm Wood Mackenzie, burning gas produces only half the carbon dioxide as burning coal. 

“I’m convinced gas will be the core of the energy transition,” said Pouyanné. He said it can also play a role in shoring up the power generated by intermittent wind and solar. 

There’s truth to that, said Dan Grossman of the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), but he noted that companies using natural gas have to make sure they’re dealing with their methane emissions.

A man in glasses and a blazer poses for a photo inside a hotel conference hallway.
Dan Grossman, vice-president with Environmental Defense Fund, says companies using natural gas will have to consider how they’ll deal with the methane emissions produced throughout its lifecycle. (Tiphanie Roquette/CBC)

“If you really do want this to be the decade of gas, then from a climate perspective, you better make sure that you have your house in order when it comes to methane emissions,” said Grossman, who is vice-president of energy transition with the U.S.-based environmental advocacy group.

A renewable energy developer also pushed back against the sunny portrayal of natural gas. 

John Ketchum, the CEO of NextEra Energy, the largest producer of wind and solar power in the U.S., said it takes time to build a natural gas plant from scratch, and that labour shortages make the problem worse. 

“To get your hands on a gas turbine right now and actually get it built throughout the market, you’re really looking at 2030 or later,” said Ketchum.

A man in a blue suit and red tie is pictured during a panel discussion at CERA Week.
John Ketchum, with NextEra, warned that building new gas-fired turbines can be costly and time consuming. (Grant Miller Photography)

Still, politicians and executives from LNG-producing countries were busy boosting its advantages this week. 

U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright, whose administration has reversed a previous ban on LNG exports, said there’s no way renewables can replace the “myriad” benefits of natural gas, and took a Monday press conference as an opportunity to sign an LNG export approval

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is also in Houston to promote natural gas. While onstage Wednesday during a CERAWeek panel, she promoted a recent study commissioned by the Alberta Energy Regulator revealing the province has natural gas reserves of 1,360 trillion cubic feet (TCF), of which 130 TCF is proved and recoverable. Previously, it was thought Alberta had 24 TCF.

“We have a really, really good gas story,” said Smith, whose government has commissioned an AI data centre plan that aims to promote the province as a ‘prime destination‘ thanks to its natural gas reserves. 

Canada has six West Coast LNG projects proposed and under construction, including LNG Canada’s Phase 1, which is expected to come online this summer, according to RBC. That project will be closely watched by countries like Japan, said Tatsuya Terazawa, CEO of the Institute of Energy Economics, Japan. 

A man in a navy suit and a light blue tie poses for a photo at a hotel conference centre.
Tatsuya Terazawa, with the Institute of Energy Economics, Japan, says his country is interested in Canadian natural gas as a way to shore up energy security and feed demand from data centres. (Paula Duhatschek/CBC)

Terazawa said Japan has few natural resources of its own and is looking to Canadian LNG to boost its energy security and help with “diversifying our source of energy,” especially given the short distance between B.C. and Japan.

O’Neill, the Woodside executive, said she, too, is keeping an eye on Canada. While the company previously pulled out of an LNG project in B.C., O’Neill said they’re watching the development of LNG on this country’s West Coast.

“We’ve been very bullish about the opportunities to monetize North American gas for a while,” she said. 



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