In a sense, this creates a manufacturing opportunity for the US to take a raw material, process it, and sell it abroad. It also fits in pretty well with the fact that a number of countries in Latin America have had difficulty in building and upgrading their own refineries. So it's opened up a marketing opportunity for the United States to take advantage of.
JS: What can we expect from Mexico's recently adopted energy reforms and what regional effect could this have?
AS: Well the Mexican government and Pemex, the state oil company, are very excited about the opportunities they see for Mexico to increase its production and to take advantage of some of the new technologies that are available through cooperation with non-Mexican companies. They believe that it is going to be instrumental in reversing some of the difficulties they've had in oil production and natural gas production.
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It certainly looks to the EIA as something that we're going to have to watch very carefully when considering the longer-term outlook for Mexican energy production.
We actually bumped up the Mexican numbers because of the opportunities we think will be created by constitutional reform there. If the implementation of that proceeds along the lines that the Mexicans are considering, I think we'll probably have to look at it again.
JS: In its latest report, the EIA notes that the Americas accounted for 20% of global natural gas trade, and while 80% of that was via pipeline, the rest was traded as LNG. How do you see this proportion changing over the next 5-10 years?
AS: Well, I suspect that we're going to see more of both. Our longer-term outlook shows US pipeline exports of natural gas to Mexico going up, and we also see LNG exports from the United States increasing. We're not responsible for permitting. What we try to do is look at the economics. We run our national energy modeling system to basically say, "What would the economics do if you let them run?" And that shows we're likely to see increases in exports of both LNG and pipeline gas.
Interestingly, the model also says that there's plenty of production to do that and still allow demand in the US to go up considerably. We're seeing demand increases in natural gas use by refineries; it's a big refinery fuel. And in the industrial sector, we see significant gains in natural gas consumption occurring in areas like bulk chemicals, food processing, and elsewhere. And then the biggest increases in natural gas may come from electric utilities, which will likely be using more natural gas relative to coal to provide electricity growth in the United States.
JS: Is the US Department of Energy moving too quickly or too slowly to approve LNG exports to non-FTA countries?
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AS: I think that the Department of Energy's Department of Fossil Energy, which is responsible for permits, is moving exactly the way it should under the law to make the kinds of findings necessary from a legal standpoint. I wouldn't characterize it as too fast or too slow. I would say that from what I can see, it's just right given the legal framework.
JS: When could we expect the US to become a net gas exporter?
AS: The EIA's forecast is that the US will become a net exporter of natural gas before the end of this decade.
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