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subject: The Future Of The South Eastern Europe Natural Gas Market - Market Research Reports On Aarkstore Ent [print this page]


Introduction
Introduction

Declining indigenous supply combined with post-recessionary demand recovery mean that Europe's gas market has reached an important tipping point. Central to this is a need to diversify existing supply sources. South Eastern Europe is emerging as an important new transit route for Central Asian and North African gas, as well as a major demand hub in its own right.

Scope

*Insight on likely future supply dynamics in the European gas market set against a backdrop of demand recovery and diversifying supply sources.

*Analysis of new import infrastructure projects and their likely impact on regional supply dynamics.

*A benchmarking of the state of readiness in different markets for impending changes to supply/demand patterns.

*An overview of which markets are likely to increase their dominance and relative importance in the European gas sphere.

Highlights

European gas consumption is reaching maximum production capacity. It's 8% buffer of supply over demand is not sufficient to ensure continued security of supply, particularly given that demand will rise as post-recessionary economic growth gains ground.

South East Europe is one of the largest sources of untapped natural gas in Europe. However, infrastructure is often insufficient to exploit this.

Fortunately, many of these countries have shown strong economic growth in the last 10 years and, in many cases, have recognized that weak infrastructure is the primary factor limiting further growth.

Western Europe cannot rely on Russia for its natural gas if it intends to weather future price spikes or gas shortages. Gazprom is currently facing the challenges of Qatari LNG arriving in Europe and US shale gas collapsing the price of gas. It will face further problems when Russian production fails to meet demand growth.

Reasons to Purchase

*Understand the growing role of South East Europe as both a gas supply route and as a new investment zone.

*Analyse the impact of the range of planned, possible and confirmed pipeline projects in the region.

*Formulate a strategic response to changing gas supply routes and understand the new demand led dynamics this will create.

Table of Contents :

VIEW 1

CATALYST 1

SUMMARY 1

CONTENTS 2

Segmentation of the natural gas market 2

Status quo 2

Natural gas demand: Mediterranean responsible for Europe's demand growth 2

Natural gas supply: Italy, Spain and Turkey are optimal import routes 2

Current changes 2

Change drivers/barriers: fear of Russian dependence 2

Planned changes: planned pipelines would span all demand hot zones 2

Industry outlook 2

Natural gas demand/supply hot zones 2

Supply/demand forecasts to 2020 for key countries 2

Changes to product and pricing: LNG more important if pipelines fail 2

This report divides Europe along logistics boundaries rather than by geopolitical positioning 2

Europe will be split by natural gas access routes: Europe will be split by natural gas access routes: 2

ANALYSIS 3

European demand profile: recession had little impact on overall demand growth 3

Western Europe: demand has stagnated completely during the recession 4

South Eastern Europe: growth has been continuous and rapid 5

Western Europe needs Russia 6

Demand trends in Europe: growth localized to the Mediterranean and Caspian Seas 7

European supply profile: supply simply will not suffice if demand rises 8

Russia is by far the largest of the few Western producers and only Norway shows any sign of growing 9

Four countries have emerged as the largest producers in a region where production has picked up since 2004 10

Supply trends in Europe: growth localized to the Mediterranean and Caspian Seas 11

Climate targets drive a move away from coal and oil: natural gas and renewables are primary alternatives 12

Can South East Europe develop its own energy market? How will this interact with Western needs? 12

Political involvement is rising because increased competition for gas may lead to national shortages 13

Energy shortages may be good indicators of natural gas growth hotspots 13

South East Europe faces large energy shortages due to weak infrastructure, especially as demand is likely to increase in time 14

Western Europe is struggling to meet its large gas demand without Russia's help 15

South East Europe will see the fastest response to gas shortages, as infrastructure projects are expected online in 2010-12 16

Infrastructure developments are the key indicators of Europe's future gas market 17

Pipelines are likely to swarm into Italy and Turkey, opening up the entire Mediterranean to natural gas 17

Major cross-border pipelines into Europe 18

South East Europe has sprawling infrastructure developments and Italy is likely to be a major hub 19

LNG is the future of natural gas transmission but, although pipelines have an essential role, they are experiencing delays 20

The importance of natural gas in national power generation: North Africa, Italy and Spain are key users of gas-fired power 22

Industry is often a driving force for natural gas demand: Egypt, Turkey, Iran and Slovakia are booming 23

Infrastructure is the main hindrance to a mature gas market, but Mediterranean Europe is keen to avoid this 24

Demand hot zones: key players in the future of natural gas demand - Iran emerging as a production giant 25

Supply hot zones: the UK is losing territory as a major gas consumer 26

Which countries will be the key players in Europe's natural gas market to 2020? 27

Iran is unlikely to become a net exporter in the foreseeable future as its demand exceeds supply 28

Turkey is a key player, driven by its growing industry, its important location and its improving infrastructure 29

Turkey 29

Italy will play a key role in Europe, as shrinking supply means that imports will have to increase to meet demand 30

Italy 30

Egypt has excellent demand growth but, most importantly, it has steeper supply growth to feed Europe 31

Algeria shows very positive supply potential, although its domestic demand is less encouraging than Egypt's 32

Libya emerged in the gas market in 2004 thanks to major gas finds, but even without further finds, Libya is key to Europe's supply 33

France is at the heart of European gas demand, and the end of the recession should encourage renewed demand growth 34

Germany is not expected to rely too heavily on gas imports, with renewables taking a share of the burden 35

The Netherlands will play a smaller role in the gas market as production shrinks and demand remains stagnant 36

UK demand is growing relatively slowly, while supply is plummeting, creating an urgent need to find more imports 37

Russia's profile is flat: supply should be enough to feed continuing demand growth, with large volumes left for export 38

Russia 38

Will any other factors affect the European natural gas market? Perhaps product and price will affect dynamics 39

APPENDIX 40

Forecast Data 40

Ask the analyst 41

consulting 41

Disclaimer 41

List of Figures

Figure 1: Total European natural gas consumption since 1990 3

Figure 2: Total Western natural gas consumption since 1990 4

Figure 3: Total South Eastern natural gas consumption since 1990 5

Figure 4: Total Western natural gas consumption Vs Total Western natural gas production without Russia 6

Figure 5: Map of European natural gas demand trends 7

Figure 6: Total European natural gas production since 1990 8

Figure 7: Total Western natural gas production since 1990 9

Figure 8: Total South Eastern natural gas production since 1990 10

Figure 9: Map of European natural gas supply trends 11

Figure 10: Causes of natural gas shortages in 2008/9: South East 14

Figure 11: Causes of natural gas shortages in 2008/9: West 15

Figure 12: Chart to show how prepared countries are to respond to their natural gas shortages 16

Figure 13: Map of major pipelines into Europe 17

Figure 14: List of the most important pipelines feeding European natural gas markets 18

Figure 15: Map of planned natural gas storage sites 19

Figure 16: Map of all LNG terminals in Europe 20

Figure 17: Ranking of how prepared Europe is for natural gas growth 21

Figure 18: Share of natural gas in power generation - scored ranking 22

Figure 19: Scale of Industrial natural gas consumption - scored ranking 23

Figure 20: Scale of natural gas infrastructure - scored ranking 24

Figure 21: Key European gas demand markets forecast to 2020 25

Figure 22: Key European gas supply markets forecast to 2020 26

Figure 23: r forecast of Iran's natural gas market to 2020 28

Figure 24: forecast of Turkey's natural gas market to 2020 29

Figure 25: forecast of Italy's natural gas market to 2020 30

Figure 26: forecast of Egypt's natural gas market to 2020 31

Figure 27: forecast of Algeria's natural gas market to 2020 32

Figure 28: forecast of Lybia's natural gas market to 2020 33

Figure 29: forecast of France's natural gas market to 2020 34

Figure 30: forecast of Germany's natural gas market to 2020 35

Figure 31: forecast of Netherland's natural gas market to 2020 36

Figure 32: forecast of UK's natural gas market to 2020 37

Figure 33: forecast of Russia's natural gas market to 2020 38

Figure 34: Forecast supply and demand data 40

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http://www.aarkstore.com/reports/The-Future-of-the-South-Eastern-Europe-Natural-Gas-Market-45141.html

by: Aarkstore Enterprise




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