Falling crude, LNG, coal prices huge positive for India: Crisil

Falling prices of crude oil, thermal coal and liquefied natural gas (LNG) are huge positive for India as energy imports account for 36 percent of its total imports last fiscal, research firm Crisil Research said here.

Mumbai: Falling prices of crude oil, thermal coal and liquefied natural gas (LNG) are huge positive for India as energy imports account for 36 percent of its total imports last fiscal, research firm Crisil Research said here.

"The prices of crude oil, thermal coal and liquefied natural gas (LNG) will be under pressure in the long term because of structural shifts like surge in supplies, move to alternate fuel, and slowing demand.

"Falling crude, LNG, coal prices is a huge positive for India, since energy imports accounted for 36 percent of its total imports last fiscal," Crisil Research said in a report.

Between fiscals 2009 and 2014, India's energy import bill surged at an average 14 per cent annually to USD 161 billion. This is expected to rise only 1.6 per cent annually to USD 175 billion by 2019 because prices of the three commodities are forecast to decline. Subdued prices will also help curb oil subsidies, it said.

"In the last fifteen years, rising prices encouraged significant investments in the oil & gas and mining.

Globally, investments in oil & gas exploration and production more than doubled to USD 5.7 trillion between 1998 and 2013, vis-a-vis the previous 15 years.

"This led to reserve accretion increasing by 1.6 times to 626 billion barrels of oil equivalent over 1998-2013 period," said Crisil Research president Mukesh Agarwal.

Over the next five years, significant supplies of oil of 6-7 million barrels per day (mbpd) are expected from the US, Canada, Brazil and Iraq. Similarly, incremental thermal coal supplies of 1,000 million tonne (17 per cent of global demand in 2013) are expected, primarily from Australia and Indonesia, the report said.

"The demand growth for oil is expected to be subdued at 0.8-1.0 percent over 2014 to 2018 as compared with 1.2 per cent in the last five years) because of increasing energy efficiencies in North America and Europe, slower growth in China and a shift towards alternative fuels.

"Slowing economic growth in China and India will mean global demand for coal staying subdued at 3.2 percent over the next five years as against 3.9 percent in the last five years, leading to pressure on prices.

Similarly, LNG demand is also expected to be muted due to lower requirement in Japan and India," the report said.

Crisil Research expects Brent crude to decline to USD 90-100 per barrel by 2018 from USD 109 in 2013, while thermal coal is seen at USD 77-82 per tonne compared with USD 84 in 2013. Spot LNG is forecast at USD 13-14 per mmbtu from USD15 per mmbtu in 2013 -- all because of improved supplies and relatively subdued demand.

"Unlike past conflicts, fresh supplies from the US have offset supply disruptions because of tensions in Middle East and North Africa, and prices have not breached USD 117 per barrel this year. Also, with OPEC spare capacity projected to more than double to 8 mbpd over 2013 to 2018, the impact of geopolitical tensions on oil prices will be even lesser and this is a seismic shift," Crisil Research Industry and Customised Research Senior Director Prasad Koparkar said.

Thermal coal and LNG prices, on the other hand, have been muted despite rising costs because of rising supplies amid weak demand, it said.

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