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 The 
 LNG shipping market in 2004 
 
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 The fleet 
 Technical developments 
 Commercial developments 
 What is there for 2005? 
  
  
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 LNG Shipping has become one of the most active sectors
 in shipping with unparalleled new orders, forecast
 growth expected to continue, at least 19 speculative
 orders, new owners entering the "Club" along
 with increased sizes and the possible demise of the
 steam turbine. And all of this has occurred in 2004! 
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 The fleet
  At the end of 2003 there were 152 LNG vessels in
 service with a further 34 on order, the largest of
 which was 153,500 cbm capacity. RasGas II had a tender
 for up to 8 ships with market talk of about another 47
 ships needed with the likelihood that we would see
 200,000 cbm and larger vessels ordered. 
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 At the end of 2004 there were 174 ships in service with
 113 ships on order, but let us look at these figures in
 more detail:
 
 - Korean shipyards control over 75 % of the new
 orders,
 
 - GTT membrane designs account for 82 % of the
 orderbook,
 
 - 16 ships on order are not steam turbine and 2 of
 them are purely speculative,
 
 - 8 ships are over 209,000 cbm fitted with
 re-liquefaction plants,
 
 - China finally signed their long awaited order for
 2 new ships,
 
 - 1 new Korean yard (Samho) has gained an order just
 a few weeks after a new Japanese yard (Imabari)
 enters the Club,
 
 - One recent LNG entrant has been bought out by an
 even newer entrant, 
 
 - Two new Russian LNG owners have joined,
 
 - 4 newcomers have won the sought after (but non
 lucrative?) Qatar orders,
 
 - Yard prices have risen as steel prices have
 increased and yard slots have disappeared,
 
 - Greek shipowners have 8 ships on order, 4 of which
 are unfixed,
 
 - Charter rates and periods are falling: 2 new
 orders fixed against 10 year charters,
 
 - 2 new orders have been placed at Universal for
 75,000 cbm ships for Mediterranean trade.
 
  
 However we must stress that, among all types of
 ships, LNG carriers are the ones that have recorded the
 smallest rise in newbuilding prices, due to a fierce
 competition among shipyards in this sector. Shipyard's
 strategy has also diverged among the LNG builders:
 Daewoo and Samsung have invested in the construction
 of series of ships, Hanjin has decided not to take LNG
 orders any more and Hyundai has chosen to concentrate
 on "standard" ships as prices for the latter
 have risen more sharply and account for less cgt
 (compensated gross tons) than their LNG counterparts. 
 Of the 113 ships on order at end 2004, 69 have been 
 placed this year which in some respects follows the old 
 school of LNG (circa early 1980's) where projects and 
 Japanese buyers prefer to order rather than
 charter ships that are available or are already on
 speculative order - 19 ships on order are unfixed with
 4 existing new ships sitting idle. 
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 Technical
 Developments
  Ever since the company has been involved in LNG
 shipping, the standard line used by banks and projects
 has been "No new or unproven technology and we
 will not be first of a class": this probably
 accounts for no new developments in nearly 40 years!
 However, in the space of 12 months we have seen the
 size rise from 145,000 cbm in January to 154,000 cbm in
 August and to 216,000 cbm in November. 
 Likewise, the need for the reliable steam turbine 
 engine was an absolute must, with much scepticism 
 voiced at the innovative French companies of Gaz de 
 France and Chantiers de l'Atlantique for building dual 
 fuelled diesel electric (hereafter DFDE) vessels, but 
 that was until November when it would seem that
 several parties threw caution to the wind when first BP
 ordered 4 DFDE ships, swiftly followed by AP Moller
 ordering 2 similar vessels. However, these owners were
 clearly outdone by Qatar, aided by ExxonMobil, who
 confirmed their long awaited selection by allocating 8
 new 200,000 cbm plus vessels with slow speed diesel
 engines equipped with re-liquefaction plants 
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 Commercial
 Developments
  The year started with almost historically low LNG
 shipyard prices, but it closed with prices having risen
 by over $ 30 million per unit. 
 Twenty years charter hire period was the usual
 duration for the shipping contracts, twenty years
 matching the SPA (sales and purchase agreement).
 However, the long term would appear to be stretching
 out to 25 years with short term settling around 3-5
 years, with the exception of the occasional spot
 fixture of which the year's low was reported to be $ 25,000
 per day. This is a strange phenomenon when VLCC's
 were fixing at $ 260,000 per day, yet there is a rush
 of tanker owners wanting to get into LNG. Does the new
 world LNG need some explanation to the new entrants? 
 The tonne-miles demand for LNG is increasing as the
 Atlantic Basin and West Coast US source the gas from
 further afield. The increased distance inflates the
 transportation costs that would naturally reduce the
 net revenue for the LNG producer if the end market
 could not absorb a higher price for the transportation.
 The transport costs can be reduced by increasing the
 amount of cargo carried, and hence delivered, on each
 ship, reducing the fuel costs and keeping the daily
 hire rate as low as possible. 
 The Qatar projects of RasGas II and Qatargas II have
 clearly been the most successful projects in reducing
 transport costs, as they have managed to combine all
 three of the above elements. New entrants would appear
 to have been the most co-operative with the Qatar
 shareholders, as they have secured 15 of the 16
 contracts awarded in 2004. So, was there a price to
 enter the hallowed "Club"? 
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 And what is there for 2005?
  2004 has been a phenomenal year for LNG shipping and
 it would be impossible to repeat this in 2005. However
 the Qatari projects will continue to expand, likewise
 Nigeria. New projects will be agreed in Brass River,
 Angola, Yemen, Iran, Libya and Australia that should
 produce in total a requirement for about a further 70
 ships. If the fashion for non steam turbine continues,
 there could be some obsolescence of the older, smaller,
 thirsty tonnage that could promote some more orders but
 only if there are the slots available. 
 No doubt ever more new entrants will arrive,
 especially if Qatar and ExxonMobil continue with their
 selection criteria - cheapest wins. 
 Ship prices may peak but stability in steel prices
 and exchange rates will be needed. 
 Technological innovations have apparently been
 accepted so there may be a new containment system
 developed to compete with the membrane design and
 perhaps another new propulsion system will be ordered:
 Shell is rumoured to be seriously looking at a gas
 turbine design. The standard ships design should rise
 to 163,000 cbm as this is the optimal size to access
 most of the existing terminals, as opposed to the
 dedicated terminals required for the 216,000 cbm size. 
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Shipping and Shipbuilding Markets in 2004
I N D E X
 
 
 
												 
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