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Russia Faces Lower LNG Revenue; Shift to Asia Doubles Costs

  • Shift of Russian LNG exports to Asia raises logistics costs, cutting revenues
  • EU plans full phase-out of Russian LNG imports from 2027
  • Russia struggles to secure alternative long-term buyers
  • India declined some Russian LNG cargoes, citing high ​costs

MOSCOW, May 18 (Reuters) - Russia's diversification of its liquefied natural gas exports to Asia after the ‌loss of the European market will cut its revenue due to at least a doubling of logistics costs, industry sources and analysts told Reuters.

The European Union plans to fully phase out Russian LNG imports from the beginning of 2027 as part ​of its sanctions pressure on Moscow over the war with Ukraine.

In an attempt to regain the ​initiative, President Vladimir Putin said early in March that Russia could stop gas supplies ⁠to Europe with immediate effect and seek longer-term commitments from other buyers.

But that so far has proved challenging.

Industry ​sources told Reuters that India refused to buy a cargo from Russia's U.S.-sanctioned plant. One industry source said Russian LNG ​may have proved too expensive once transport costs and sanctions-related complications were factored in.

A trip from Yamal LNG on the Arctic Yamal peninsula to Europe takes around 17 to 20 days, compared with much longer routes to Asia: 50 to 60 ​days via the Suez Canal, 70 to 80 days via the Cape of Good Hope, and 50 to ​65 days via the Northern Sea Route (NSR) across Russia's Arctic shores.

Transport costs from the plant to a port in Europe ‌average $1 to $1.5 ⁠per million British thermal units (mmBtu) to northwest Europe and $2.5 to $5 to India, or around $3 on average, said Alexei Belogoryev, a research director at the Institute for Energy and Finance in Moscow.

NORTHERN SEA ROUTE TOO COSTLY

The Suez Canal currently offers the lowest-cost route for Russian LNG, although it carries security risks, analysts say.

"For year-round deliveries ​to India, this is the ​most optimal option," said ⁠Alexander Buyanov, deputy head of the Moscow-based Central Research Institute of the Maritime Fleet.

By contrast, the Northern Sea Route — a key focus of Russia's transport strategy — is ​the most expensive option for shipments to South Asia and complicated by a ​shortage of ice-class ⁠tankers, according to analysts.

The institute estimates show transport costs from Yamal to India's Kochi port exceed $187 per ton (about $3.8 per mmBtu) via the Northern Sea Route when using Arc7-type ice-class tankers.

Combining the Northern Sea Route with trans-shipment via ⁠Russia's far ​eastern Kamchatka peninsula cuts costs to $163 per ton (about $3.3 per mmBtu) and ​reduces tanker demand to 27 from 50.

The cheapest option is via the Suez Canal with trans-shipment in Murmansk using Arc7 and Arc4 ​vessels, at $128.3 to $132.9 per ton ($2.6 to $2.7 per mmBtu).

Reporting by Oksana Kobzeva; Writing by Vladimir Soldatkin; Editing by Hugh Lawson

Source: Reuters


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