Sep 23, 2019 / 05:26
Vietnam to start construction of LNG terminal in October to serve energy transition
The terminal will supply gas to electricity generation in Vietnam as the country strives to reduce reliance on coal.
State-run PetroVietnam Gas Corporation (PV GAS) and its partners plan to start construction of one of the country’s first LNG terminals in southern Vietnam in late October, S&P Global Platts has reported, citing an official with parent company PetroVietnam.
The Thi Vai LNG terminal is one of at least two new LNG import facilities under development that would make Vietnam the newest LNG importing country in Southeast Asia.
Gas distribution company PV Gas is in process of reviewing the remaining design issues of the LNG terminal with consultants and contractors before construction can begin, the official said.
The Thi Vai terminal is expected to be operational in the third quarter of 2022, the official said on the sidelines of the Vietnam LNG-to-Power Summit 2019 in Hanoi on September 19.
It will have a capacity of 1 million metric ton (mt)/year in its first phase in 2022, which will be raised to 3 million mt/year by 2023 in the second phase of development.
On June 24, PV Gas awarded an engineering, procurement and construction contract to build the Thi Vai terminal to South Korea’s Samsung C&T Corp and PetroVietnam Technical Services Corp.
On the same day, it signed an agreement to supply LNG from Thi Vai to PetroVietnam Power’s proposed Nhon Trach 3 and Nhon Trach 4 power plants in southern Dong Nai province with a capacity of 600 MW each.
Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) – the national oil company, through its gas arm PV Gas, supplies natural gas to meet 30% of Vietnam’s electricity demand and 70% of its fertilizer needs.
Vietnam held 24.7 trillion cubic feet of proved natural gas reserves at the end of 2016, up from 6.8 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) in 2011, of which half was located in the northern deep-water areas of the Song Hong basin, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).
It currently does not import any natural gas despite growing gas demand for power generation in southern Vietnam and it produced 375 billion cubic feet of dry natural gas in 2016, which was fully consumed domestically, the EIA said citing official data.
In 2014, PV Gas signed two LNG sale and purchase agreements with Russia’s Gazprom Marketing & Trading and Anglo Dutch Shell for deliveries into Thi Vai LNG terminal. This was followed by two preliminary LNG supply agreements with Virginia-based AES Group and Alaska Gasline Development Corp in November 2017.
The US EIA says a second terminal, Son My LNG, is being planned with multiple phases, the first of which will have a capacity of 86 billion cubic feet (Bcf)/year.
Earlier this week, Australia’s LNG Ltd signed a 20-year SPA to supply 2 million mt/year of LNG from its proposed Magnolia LNG export terminal in Louisiana to a gas-to-power project in Vietnam. Under the deal, LNG will be sold to Delta Offshore Energy to fuel a 3,200 MW combined-cycle power plant located in the southern province of Bac Lieu.
A gas facility by PetroVietnam Gas (PV GAS). Photo: VOV
|
The Thi Vai LNG terminal is one of at least two new LNG import facilities under development that would make Vietnam the newest LNG importing country in Southeast Asia.
Gas distribution company PV Gas is in process of reviewing the remaining design issues of the LNG terminal with consultants and contractors before construction can begin, the official said.
The Thi Vai terminal is expected to be operational in the third quarter of 2022, the official said on the sidelines of the Vietnam LNG-to-Power Summit 2019 in Hanoi on September 19.
It will have a capacity of 1 million metric ton (mt)/year in its first phase in 2022, which will be raised to 3 million mt/year by 2023 in the second phase of development.
On June 24, PV Gas awarded an engineering, procurement and construction contract to build the Thi Vai terminal to South Korea’s Samsung C&T Corp and PetroVietnam Technical Services Corp.
On the same day, it signed an agreement to supply LNG from Thi Vai to PetroVietnam Power’s proposed Nhon Trach 3 and Nhon Trach 4 power plants in southern Dong Nai province with a capacity of 600 MW each.
Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) – the national oil company, through its gas arm PV Gas, supplies natural gas to meet 30% of Vietnam’s electricity demand and 70% of its fertilizer needs.
Vietnam held 24.7 trillion cubic feet of proved natural gas reserves at the end of 2016, up from 6.8 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) in 2011, of which half was located in the northern deep-water areas of the Song Hong basin, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).
It currently does not import any natural gas despite growing gas demand for power generation in southern Vietnam and it produced 375 billion cubic feet of dry natural gas in 2016, which was fully consumed domestically, the EIA said citing official data.
In 2014, PV Gas signed two LNG sale and purchase agreements with Russia’s Gazprom Marketing & Trading and Anglo Dutch Shell for deliveries into Thi Vai LNG terminal. This was followed by two preliminary LNG supply agreements with Virginia-based AES Group and Alaska Gasline Development Corp in November 2017.
The US EIA says a second terminal, Son My LNG, is being planned with multiple phases, the first of which will have a capacity of 86 billion cubic feet (Bcf)/year.
Earlier this week, Australia’s LNG Ltd signed a 20-year SPA to supply 2 million mt/year of LNG from its proposed Magnolia LNG export terminal in Louisiana to a gas-to-power project in Vietnam. Under the deal, LNG will be sold to Delta Offshore Energy to fuel a 3,200 MW combined-cycle power plant located in the southern province of Bac Lieu.
Other News
- Trade ministry proposes purchasing renewable electricity mechanisms without EVN’s involvement
- Australia and Vietnam develop competitive electricity markets
- Vietnam, Thailand advance realization of “Three Connections” strategy
- Vietnamese Gov’t to expand list of electricity buyers under direct power agreement scheme
- Viettel opens largest data center in Vietnam to support AI development
- Vietnam’s economy expected to grow at solid pace in 2024-2025: ADB
- Apartment prices in Hanoi are closing in on those in Ho Chi Minh City
- Coffee exports reach record $5 billion
- Nearly 36,000 Vietnamese workers go abroad in Q1 2024
- New Vietnam-Laos trade agreement signed
Trending
-
Culture is national asset: Vietnam PM
-
Vietnam news in brief- April 19
-
Cultural similarities provide basis for Vietnam-Italy cooperation in various fields
-
Colorful stage shows in Hoan Kiem Lake pedestrian area
-
It happened as it had to happen
-
Hanoi street where dead appliances come back to life
-
Vietnam’s economy urged to rely on internal strengths to weather global uncertainties: ADB
-
Vietnam, Thailand advance realization of “Three Connections” strategy
-
MICHELIN Guide sets its sights on Vietnam’s central region