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    THE RISE OF CHINAAND ITS ENERGY IMPLICATIONS

    ENERGYforumJames A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy t Rice Universit

    Quantitative Analysis of Scenarios for Chinese DomesticUnconventional Natural Gas Resources andTheir Role in Global LNG Markets

    Kenneth B. Medlock III, Ph.D.

    Peter R. Hartley, Ph.D.

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    JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY

    RICE UNIVERSITY

    Quantitative Analysis of Scenarios for

    Chinese Domestic Unconventional

    Natural Gas Resources and Their

    Role in Global LNG Markets

    By

    Kenneth B. Medlock III, Ph.D.

    JAMES A.BAKER,III, AND SUSAN G.BAKER FELLOW IN ENERGY AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS,

    JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY,RICE UNIVERSITY

    AND

    Peter R. Hartley, Ph.D.

    RICE SCHOLAR,JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY, AND

    GEORGE AND CYNTHIAMITCHELL CHAIR OF ECONOMICS ,RICE UNIVERSITY

    PREPARED BY THE ENERGY FORUM OF THE

    JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICYAS PART OF THE STUDY

    THERISE OFCHINA ANDITSENERGYIMPLICATIONS

    DECEMBER 2,2011

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    THIS PAPER WAS WRITTEN BY A RESEARCHER (OR RESEARCHERS) WHO PARTICIPATED IN THE

    JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY STUDY.THE RESEARCH AND THE VIEWS

    EXPRESSED WITHIN ARE THOSE OF THE INDIVIDUAL RESEARCHER(S) AND DO NOT

    NECESSARILY REPRESENT THE VIEWS OF THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC

    POLICY OR THE STUDY SPONSORS.

    2011 BY THE JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY OF RICE UNIVERSITY

    THIS MATERIAL MAY BE QUOTED OR REPRODUCED WITHOUT PRIOR PERMISSION,

    PROVIDED APPROPRIATE CREDIT IS GIVEN TO THE AUTHOR AND

    THE JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY.

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    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    The Energy Forum of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy would like to thank The

    Institute of Energy Economics, Japan, and the sponsors of the Baker Institute Energy Forum for their

    generous support of this program. The James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy would also like to

    thank Deloitte MarketPoint LLC for its continued support of the Energy Forums natural gas modeling

    efforts. The Energy Forum further acknowledges contributions by study researchers and writers.

    ENERGY FORUM MEMBERS

    ACCENTURE

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    ABOUT THE STUDYThe Rise of China and Its Energy Implications is a major research initiative to investigate the

    implications of Chinas oil and natural gas policies and domestic energy market development on

    global energy markets. This study focuses on the influence of Chinas energy development on

    U.S. and Japanese energy security and global geopolitics. Utilizing geopolitical and economic

    modeling and scenario analysis, the study analyzes various possible outcomes for Chinas

    domestic energy production and its future import levels. The study considers how trends in

    Chinas energy use will influence U.S.-China relations and the level of involvement of the U.S.

    oil industry in Chinas domestic energy sector.

    STUDY AUTHORS

    JOE BARNES

    JAMES D.COAN

    JAREER ELASS

    MAHMOUD A.ELGAMAL

    PETER R.HARTLEY

    AMY MYERS JAFFE

    STEVEN W.LEWIS

    DAVID R.MARES

    KENNETH B.MEDLOCK III

    RONALD SOLIGO

    RICHARD J.STOLL

    ALAN TRONER

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    ABOUT THE ENERGY FORUM AT THE

    JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY

    The Baker Institute Energy Forum is a multifaceted center that promotes original, forward-looking

    discussion and research on the energy-related challenges facing our society in the 21st century. The

    mission of the Energy Forum is to promote the development of informed and realistic public policy

    choices in the energy area by educating policymakers and the public about important trendsboth

    regional and globalthat shape the nature of global energy markets and influence the quantity and

    security of vital supplies needed to fuel world economic growth and prosperity.

    The forum is one of several major foreign policy programs at the James A. Baker III Institute for

    Public Policy of Rice University. The mission of the Baker Institute is to help bridge the gap between

    the theory and practice of public policy by drawing together experts from academia, government, the

    media, business, and nongovernmental organizations. By involving both policymakers and scholars,

    the institute seeks to improve the debate on selected public policy issues and make a difference in theformulation, implementation, and evaluation of public policy.

    JAMES A.BAKER IIIINSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY

    RICE UNIVERSITY MS40

    P.O.BOX 1892

    HOUSTON,TX772511892USA

    HTTP://WWW.BAKERINSTITUTE.ORG

    [email protected]

    http://www.bakerinstitute.org/http://www.bakerinstitute.org/http://www.bakerinstitute.org/http://www.bakerinstitute.org/http://www.bakerinstitute.org/http://www.bakerinstitute.org/http://www.bakerinstitute.org/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.bakerinstitute.org/
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    ABOUT THE INSTITUTE OF

    ENERGY ECONOMICS,JAPAN

    The Institute of Energy Economics, Japan (IEEJ), was established in June 1966 and specializes in

    research activities in the area of energy from the viewpoint of Japans national economy in a bid to

    contribute to sound development of Japanese energy supply and consumption industries and to the

    improvement of domestic welfare by objectively analyzing energy problems and providing basic

    data, information and the reports necessary for policy formulation. With the diversification of social

    needs during the three and a half decades of its operation, IEEJ has expanded its scope of research

    activities to include such topics as environmental problems and international cooperation closely

    related to energy. The Energy Data and Modeling Center (EDMC), which merged with the IEEJ in

    July 1999, was established in October 1984 as an IEEJ-affiliated organization to carry out such tasks

    as the development of energy data bases, the building of various energy models, and the econometric

    analyses of energy.

    THE INSTITUTE OF ENERGY ECONOMICS,JAPANINUI BUILDING

    KACHIDOKI 10TH,11TH, AND 16TH FLOOR13-1,KACHIDOKI 1CHOME

    CHUO-KU,TOKYO 1040054JAPAN

    HTTP://ENEKEN.IEEJ.OR.JP/EN/

    http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/http://eneken.ieej.or.jp/en/
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    ABOUT THE AUTHORS

    KENNETH B.MEDLOCK III,PH.D.

    James A. Baker, III, and Susan G. Baker Fellow in Energy and Resource Economics

    James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, Rice University

    Kenneth B. Medlock III, Ph.D., is the James A. Baker, III, and Susan G. Baker Fellow in Energy and

    Resource Economics at the Baker Institute and an adjunct professor and lecturer in the Department of

    Economics at Rice University. Currently, Medlock heads the Baker Institute Energy Forums natural

    gas program and is a principal in the development of the Rice World Natural Gas Trade Model,

    which assesses the future of international natural gas trade. He also teaches energy economics

    courses and supervises students in the energy field. Medlock studies natural gas markets, gasoline

    markets, energy commodity price relationships, transportation, modeling national oil company

    behavior, economic development and energy demand, forecasting energy demand, and energy use

    and the environment. Medlock is a council member of the International Association for Energy

    Economics (IAEE), and a member of United States Association for Energy Economics (USAEE),

    The American Economic Association and the Association of Environmental and Resource

    Economists. In 2001, he won (with Ron Soligo) the IAEE Award for Best Paper of the Year in the

    Energy Journal. In 2011, he was given the USAEEs Senior Fellow Award. Medlock also served as

    an adviser to the U.S. Department of Energy and the California Energy Commission in their

    respective energy modeling efforts. He was the lead modeler of the Modeling Subgroup of the 2003

    National Petroleum Council (NPC) study of long-term natural gas markets in North America, and is

    involved in the ongoing NPC study North American Resource Development. Medlock received his

    Ph.D. in economics from Rice and held the MD Anderson Fellowship at the Baker Institute from

    2000 to 2001.

    PETER R.HARTLEY,PH.D.

    Rice Scholar, James A. Baker Institute for Public Policy

    George and Cynthia Mitchell Chair of Economics, Rice University

    Peter R. Hartley, Ph.D., is the George and Cynthia Mitchell Chair and a professor of economics at

    Rice University. He is also a Rice scholar of energy economics for the James A. Baker III Institute

    for Public Policy. Hartley has worked for more than 25 years on energy economics issues, focusing

    originally on electricity, but also including work on natural gas, oil, coal, nuclear, and renewable

    energy. He wrote on reform of the electricity supply industry in Australia throughout the 1980s and

    early 1990s and advised the government of Victoria when it completed the acclaimed privatization

    and reform of the electricity industry in that state in 1989. Apart from energy and environmental

    economics, Hartley has published research on theoretical and applied issues in money and banking,

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    business cycles, and international finance. He worked for the Priorities Review Staff, and later the

    Economic Division, of the Prime Ministers Department in the Australian government. He came to

    Rice as an associate professor of economics in 1986 after serving as an assistant professor of

    economics at Princeton University from 1980 to 1986. Hartley completed an honors degree in

    mathematics and a masters degree in economics at The Australian National University. He obtained

    a Ph.D. in economics at The University of Chicago.

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    the United States. But the rapid growth in shale gas production has turned such expectations

    upside down and rendered many of those investments obsolete. Import terminals for liquefied

    natural gas (LNG) are now scarcely utilized, and the prospects that the United States will become

    highly dependent on foreign imports in the coming years are receding.

    Rising shale gas production in the United States is also having an impact on markets in Europe

    and Asia. In particular, LNG supplies whose development was anchored on the belief that the

    United States would be a premium market are now being diverted to European and Asian buyers.

    Not only has this immediately presented consumers in Europe with an alternative to Russian

    pipeline supplies, it is also exerting pressure on the status quo of indexing gas sales in both

    Europe and Asia to a premium marker determined by the price of petroleum products. In recent

    rounds of renegotiations, Russia has had to accept far lower prices from many of its traditional

    long-term customers and has accepted a partial link to gas on gas pricing.

    Revelations about the potential for increased shale gas production are also occurring in other

    regions around the world, with shale gas discoveries being discussed in Europe, China, India,

    Australia, and elsewhere. To be sure, the enormity of global shale gas potential will have

    significant geopolitical ramifications and exert a powerful influence on U.S. energy and

    foreign policy.

    In this study, we utilize scenario analysis to examine the role that China plays in the future of

    global gas market developments. In doing so, we consider two cases, which we compare to a

    reference case, where:

    1. Chinas technically recoverable shale resource base is dramatically larger; and2. Chinas economic growth falters, thus lowering natural gas demand growth.

    We also expand on the effect of shale gas developments more generally by highlighting a recent

    paper by Medlock and Jaffe (2011)6 in which no shale is developed anywhere in the world. This

    highlights the overall importance of the shale gas resource to international gas markets.

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    Among the geopolitical repercussions of expanding shale gas production are:

    It virtually eliminates U.S. requirements for imported LNG for at least two decades,reducing U.S. and Chinese dependence on Middle East natural gas supplies, lowering the

    incentives for geopolitical and commercial competition between the two largest

    consuming countries, and providing both countries with new opportunities to diversify

    their energy supply.

    It substantially reduces Russias market share in both Europe and Asia, depending on theamount of shale resource that is ultimately available in both regions.

    It lowers prices and stimulates greater use of natural gas, thereby having significantimplications for global environmental objectives to the extent it displaces coal.

    It reduces overall dependence on Iranian natural gas, which limits Irans ability to tap energydiplomacy as a means to strengthen its regional power or to buttress its nuclear aspirations.

    It should be pointed out that the sustained rapid development of shale gas is not a certainty. In

    particular, environmental concerns regarding the use and potential contamination of water

    resources are major issues that will need to be addressed before governments will allow full

    realization of shales growth potential.7 In China, in particular, water availability for hydraulic

    fracturing may considerably diminish the potential for domestic shale development.

    According to a report by Gleick et al. (2008),8 China faces some of the most severe water

    challenges in the world due to overallocation, inefficient usage, and widespread pollution, as

    well as a fairly weak regulatory body. Moreover, the response to issues of scarcity from Beijing

    and central water agencies has typically been one involving proposals for massive new

    infrastructure to divert water from one region to another rather than new approaches to

    management. One such massive project is the South-to-North Water Transfer Project, which

    will funnel 45 billion cubic meters (bcm) of water to the northern part of the country through

    the Yangtze River basin but will not be completed for several decades at the earliest. There are

    also plans for investment in water distribution systems and the construction of more than 1,000

    water and wastewater treatment facilities. Plans for coastal water desalination are also in their

    early stages.

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    Regional conflicts over water allocation have emerged from a national water policy that seems

    centered around moving water from region to region via large infrastructure projects. This

    national policy stance is not new. The intensity of the problem in some regions can be witnessed

    by the fact that periodic clashes have occurred since the 1970s over water from the Zhang

    River. The North China Plains also face fierce competition over water, as Beijings growing

    population has led to the citys exploitation of nearly all major rivers flowing through

    surrounding provinces.

    Figure 2 highlights the potential water availability issues and their intersection with potential

    shale gas developments. Notice, with the exception of only a couple of basins, the coincidence of

    shale gas resources and water stress is very high. Due to potential water constraints, we have

    substantially reduced the technically recoverable shale gas resource base in China in our

    Reference Case. However, we do compare this outcome to one in which any potential water

    issues can be largely overcome, which results in a technically recoverable shale resource base

    that is substantially larger. We describe all scenarios in more detail below.

    Figure 2. China Shale Resource and Water Stress Map9

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    II. Study Approach

    In this study, we utilize the Rice World Gas Trade Model (RWGTM)10 to examine the market

    implications and geopolitical consequences of potentially important supply and demand side

    developments in China, namely rising supplies of natural gas from shale and changes in its

    economic outlook. The RWGTM is a dynamic spatial general equilibrium model where supply

    and demand is balanced at each location in each time period such that all spatial and temporal

    arbitrage opportunities are eliminated. The model, therefore, proves and develops reserves,

    constructs transportation routes and associated infrastructure, and calculates prices to equate

    demands and supplies while maximizing the present value of producer rents within a competitive

    framework. Thus, new infrastructures must earn a minimum return to capital in order for its

    development to occur.11 By developing pipeline transportation routes and LNG delivery

    infrastructure, the RWGTM provides a framework for examining the effects of critical economic

    and political influences on the global natural gas market within a framework grounded in

    geologic data and economic theory. Moreover, it provides insight as to the location and

    conditions under which resources are competitive in a global market.

    The RWGTM allows the examination of potential futures for U.S. and global natural gas in a

    manner that allows quantification of geopolitical influences on resource development and exportflows. The RWGTM predicts regional prices, regional supplies and demands, and interregional

    flows. Since geopolitical influences can alter market outcomes in many different ways, the non-

    stochastic nature of the RWGTM allows an analysis of many different scenarios and allows the

    model to characterize the impact of later economic outcomes on earlier investment decisions. In

    this way, the inter-temporal nature of the RWGTM allows a complete analysis of the impact on

    investment decision pathways of specific scenarios. This follows from the fact that capacity and

    reserve expansions are determined by current and future prices along with capital costs of

    expansion, operating and maintenance costs of new and existing capacity, and revenues resulting

    from future outputs and prices. The RWGTM is a unique tool because it allows simultaneous

    analysis of many different outcomes and is not sequence dependent.

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    The RWGTM is a highly disaggregated representation of existing and potential resources,

    demand sinks, and distribution networks. The extent of regional detail in the RWGTM varies

    based primarily on data availability and the potential influence of particular countries on the

    global natural gas market. For example, large consuming and producing countries, such as

    China, the United States, India, Russia, and Japan, to name a few, have extensive sub-regional

    detail in order to understand the effect that existing or developing intra-country capacity

    constraints could have on current or likely future patterns of natural gas trade. In general,

    regions are defined at the country and sub-country level, with extensive representation of

    transportation infrastructure connecting over 290 regions with more than 135 supply regions.

    U.S. demand is characterized at the state and sub-state level for the residential, commercial,

    industrial, and power generation sectors. Demand in all other countries is less detailed at the end-

    use level, as it is estimated for the power generation sector and all other sectorsa limitation

    directly related to data availability.

    Supply costs are present for each region in three primary categories(i) proved reserves, (ii)

    growth in existing fields, and (iii) undiscovered resourcesand are present for both

    conventional and unconventional resources. The resource data derives from sources including

    the Oil and Gas Journal(OGJ), United States Geological Survey (USGS), National Petroleum

    Council (NPC), Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics (ABARE), andBaker Institute research on unconventional resources in North America and globally. North

    America finding and development (F&D) costs are based on estimates developed by the NPC

    and have been adjusted using data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis KLEMS data to

    account for changes in upstream costs since the early 2000s. These costs have been

    econometrically related to play-level geological characteristics and applied globally to generate

    costs for all regions of the world. In general, long-run F&D costs increase with depletion, and

    short-run adjustment costs limit the rush to drill phenomenon. Technological change is

    allowed to reduce F&D costs over the long run.

    In a global natural gas market as develops in the RWGTM, events in one region of the world

    influence all other regions to the extent trade can occur between regions. Thus, political factors

    affecting relations between Russia and China, for example, will affect flows and prices

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    the Chinese economy in the coming years (high inflation, problems related to

    infrastructure constraints, etc.).12

    III. Defining the Resource

    Shale gas resources became prominent for its potential to provide large amounts of marketable

    natural gas in only the last several years, centered primarily on developments in the United

    States. Beginning with the Barnett shale in northeast Texas, the application of innovative new

    techniques involving the use of horizontal drilling with hydraulic fracturing has resulted in the

    rapid growth in production of natural gas from shale. Moreover, the production potential that has

    been identified since the emergence of the Barnett shalewhich until very recently was the

    largest single producing natural gas play in North America, having just been surpassed by

    production from the Haynesville shale in neighboring Louisianahas dramatically altered

    expectations for global LNG trade. Less than 10 years ago, most predictions were for a dramatic

    increase in LNG imports to the United States, but shale production has turned this thinking

    upside down. Today, growth opportunities for LNG developers are seen in primarily in Asia,

    which could be threatened by a similar emergence of shale in those regions.

    Knowledge of shale gas resource is not new as geologists have long known about the existenceof shale formations. However, the ability to access shale resources in a commercial manner is

    new. In a study published in 1997, Rogner estimated over 16,000 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of shale

    gas resource in-place globally with just under 4,000 tcf of that total estimated to be in North

    America.13 At that time, only a very small fraction (

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    recoverable resource defines the boundary of what is commercially accessible. Thus, large

    resource in-place estimates do not necessarily imply large-scale production is forthcoming

    because technical innovations and cost reductions are critical to commercial viability.

    As noted above, the application of horizontal drilling with hydraulic fracturing to create a

    reservoir in virtually impermeable shale formations propelled the Barnett shale to becoming the

    largest single producing natural gas play in North America. This subsequently altered producers'

    expectations about the viability of shale resources in other locations, and triggered a virtual rush

    to the shale resource. Innovations aimed at lowering costs continue, with longer laterals,

    increased frac stages, and better proppants. For example, Schlumberger recently reported very

    promising results in test wells from the use of its innovative new HiWAY fracing technique,

    yielding up to double the daily production and greater expected ultimate recovery when

    compared to standard slickwater fracs. Currently in North America, break-even prices for some

    of the more prolific shales are estimated to be as low as $3 per thousand cubic feet (mcf), with a

    large majority of the resource accessible at below $6/mcf. Ten years ago, costs were significantly

    higher. As firms continue to make cost reducing innovations, greater quantities of the shale

    resource will become both technically and economically viable.

    Given the magnitudes of the assessments of shale resources reported in just the past couple ofyears, modeling done at the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy (BIPP) at Rice

    University indicates a relatively conservative estimate of North American technically

    recoverable shale resource of 686 tcf. A detailed account is provided in Table 1. The break-even

    price indicated in Table 1 is the average price needed for development of the average type

    well for the associated technically recoverable resource.

    Shale gas resources are not limited to only North America. In-depth studies are currently

    underway to fully assess shale resource potential in Europe, Asia, and Australia, but a dearth of

    commercial activity renders the current assessments in those regions highly uncertain. In Europe,

    while some estimates exist, there is active research into assessing shale potential in Austria,

    Sweden, Poland, Romania, Germany, Croatia, Denmark, France, Hungary, Netherlands, Ukraine,

    and the United Kingdom, to name a few locations.

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    preliminary and are thus full of uncertainty, but it is possible that estimates of commercially

    accessible resources in these regions will grow over time, particularly as technologies are

    developed to increase production rates and lower costs.

    In fact, the shale resource is by most accounts very large. The previously mentioned studies by

    Rogner (1997) and ARI (2011) are summarized in Table 2, where technically recoverable

    resources from Rogners study have been inferred using the IEAs recent assessment of a

    reasonable recovery factor. Notice that the resources are quite substantial, especially when

    compared to the assessments in the Reference Case, which are also included in Table 2.

    Ongoing research will likely result in an increased assessment to be used in our own modeling,

    but that is preliminary at the time this research was completed. Nevertheless, in order to

    understand the implications of larger recoverable resources, we have constructed the High

    China Shale Case for comparison.

    Table 2. A Summary of Global Shale Gas Assessments**

    Notable differences in the assessments in Table 2 center largely on the level of detail. For

    example, the RWGTM has no shale gas assessment in Latin America, FSU, India, Middle East,

    North Africa, and Other. This accounts for a difference in the total technically recoverable

    Rogner (1997)* ARI (2011) RWGTM

    North America 1537 1931 686

    Latin America 847 1225 ---

    Europe 220 639 220

    FSU 251 --- ---China 1275 75

    India 63 ---

    Australasia 925 396 50

    Middle East --- ---

    North Africa 558 ---

    Other 235 538 ---

    Total 6445 6625 1031

    *- applies a 40% recovery factor to the est imated gas in place.

    1411

    1019

    **- The as ses sments in the RWGTM incorporate an asses sment of economic viability as well as a

    discount factor applied to reflect other constraints .

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    assessment relative to the ARI assessment of over 2,300 tcf. It is important to point out, however,

    that the economic viability of much of the resource identified in the Rogner and ARI studies can

    be called into question due to the rock properties and other factors related to the geophysical

    properties of the shale. Work is currently ongoing to assess the extent to which this is the case. In

    addition, factors such as market structure and mineral property rights also will play a role in the

    economic viability of shale around the world, a point that cannot be understated. Arguably, if the

    current market structure in the United States did not exist, the shale gas boom would not have

    occurred. This is due to the fact that the small producers who initiated the proof of concept had

    little to no risk of accessing markets from very small production projects. A market in which

    capacity rights are not unbundled from facility ownership does not foster entry by small

    producers.

    IV. Scenario AnalysisReference Case

    The repercussions of expanding shale gas production potential are profound. In the Reference

    Case scenario, LNG exports originate from a wide diversity of sources instead of being

    concentrated in any one geographical region, and no single supplier gains significant market

    leverage (see Figure 3). Qatar remains the largest LNG exporter while Australia emerges as a

    close second. Nigeria, Iran, and Venezuela eventually each grow to positions of prominence, andthey collectively account for about 35 percent of global LNG exports by 2040.

    Importantly, it has been shown by Medlock and Jaffe (2011) that shale gas, by displacement, has

    both spatialand temporal impacts on the global gas market. More specifically, they show that

    shale gas delays for well over a decade the worlds reliance on regions that have historically been

    volatile and greatly reduces the chances of decisive monopoly power being exercised by any

    individual or grouping of producers. In the United States, in particular, growth in LNG imports is

    put off by at least two decades.14 Nevertheless, global LNG trade grows, largely due to growth in

    Asia. In fact, the Reference Case reveals very different reliance on LNG across regions, ranging

    from very low in North America to very high in Asia (see Figure 4).

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    suppliers and consumers (i.e., increased physical liquidity) leads to a violation of condition (1).

    This is more likely to happen as the supply curve in Figure 5 becomes more elastic (flatter). 18

    Even now, evidence of diminished ability to price discriminate is emerging in Europe as there

    have been multiple announcements of changes in contractual terms, with a propensity to index at

    least a portion of sales to spot prices. Thus, by displacement, the increase in shale production in

    North America has begun to have impacts on traditional pricing mechanisms in other markets. If

    shale resources are proven to be commercially viable in Europe and Asia, this will accelerate,

    and the new normal could very well be characterized by more intense competition and

    increased pressure for departure from the traditional oil-indexed pricing paradigm.

    Figure 5. Oil Indexation and Price Discrimination

    As demonstrated in Medlock and Jaffe (2011), if the increased competition from shale had not

    emerged, two producing countries in particular would be left with a dominant position in the

    global gas market: Russia and Iran. Before the shale discoveries, these nations were expected toaccount for more than half of the worlds known conventional gas resources. Notably, both

    Russia and Iran have been more than just casual observers in the Gas Exporting Countries Forum

    (GECF). The emergence of shale limits the near term possibility of a successful natural gas cartel

    being formed by those countries involved in the GECF by increasing the elasticity of supply of

    S

    D

    P@ P=MC

    POIL INDEX

    Oil Indexed

    Contract Volume

    Spot

    Volume

    Total Volume

    P

    Q

    Rent earned from pricing supply

    above marginal cost

    Marginal price

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    natural gas in countries outside GECF, which reduces the potential for a small group of

    producers to exercise monopoly power.

    In fact, in the Reference Case, as can be seen in Figure 6, world dependence on Middle East

    natural gas remains below 20 percent until the late 2030s as rising demand from Asia finally

    makes its mark. But, as argued in Medlock and Jaffe (2011), reliance on Middle East natural gas

    is significantly higher in a world without shale gas. Moreover, the Middle East country that is

    disadvantaged the most as a result of rising shale gas production is Iran, whose exports are

    effectively delayed by over a decade.

    Figure 6. World Supply by Region, 1990-2040 (Reference Case)

    In the Reference Case, China becomes a major importer of natural gas both via pipeline and

    LNG. In fact, it is the largest driver of growth in LNG trade going forward. Figure 7 indicates

    both the growth in demand for natural gas and the manner in which demand is metvia

    domestic production (conventional and unconventional gas), LNG imports, and pipeline imports.Among the domestic options, shale gas becomes an increasingly important source of supply, but

    it largely acts to offset declines in conventional gas production. Almost all of the growth in

    demand is balanced by imports of pipeline gas from Russia, Turkmenistan, and Myanmar (with

    Russia being the largest supplier long term) and by LNG imports. In fact, LNG imports account

    for over 50 percent of Chinas gas supply longer term.

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    Figure 7. China Natural Gas Balance, 2010-2040 (Reference Case)

    Strong growth in LNG imports to China has implications for pricing in Asia, as might be

    expected. In Figure 8, we see the prices for Asia, National Balancing Point (NBP), and Henry

    Hub. Note that the Asian price remains strong relative to other global markers, being at parity

    with NBP and well above the price at Henry Hub. Interestingly, demand growth in China

    ultimately drives a strengthening of energy ties between Russia and China, a result that may, if it

    eventuates, influence the balance of power in Northeast Asia.

    Figure 8. Select Natural Gas Prices, 2010-2040 (Reference Case)19

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    V. Scenario AnalysisHigh China Shale Case

    As noted above, the recent assessment by ARI (2011) places Chinas technically recoverable

    shale gas resource at over 1,200 tcf, which is a stark contrast to the resource assessment used in

    the Reference Case (75 tcf). However, there is tremendous uncertainty around the economically

    recoverable assessment of shale in China. Challenges related to water access and availability,

    infrastructure, resource ownership and market incentive, and market structure are all very

    relevant issues that must be considered when formulating the amount of shale resource that may

    ultimately be recovered. Given the tremendous uncertainty associated with resolution of these

    types of issues, we consider a case in which the resource assessment in China is raised to 600 tcf.

    Table 3 indicates the distribution of the shale resources in both the Reference Case and the High

    China Shale Case. Notably, the resource is spread across multiple basins, where the distribution

    is informed by the ARI study and historical gas production. Note that the largest concentration of

    shale is in western (Tarim) and north central China (Ordos), which coincide with the regions

    with the largest technically recoverable assessments for conventional natural gas (85 and 19 tcf,

    respectively) and, in the case of the Ordos basin, coal bed methane (100 tcf).

    Table 3. Shale Assessment Across Cases (Units: tcf)

    Figure 9 indicates demand and the manner in which demand is met in the High China Shale

    Case. As in Figure 7 above, sinks (demand and exports) are represented as negative values and

    sources of supply are represented as positive values. A few things are of substantial note. First,

    Reference High China Shale

    Tarim Basin

    Junggar Basin

    Tuja Basin

    Sichuan Basin

    Jianghan Basin

    North Central Ordos Basin 30 150

    Songliao Basin

    Bohai Bay Basin

    Total 75 600

    250

    45

    ---West

    Central 120

    Northeas t --- 80

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    even though shale gas production is substantially higher, resulting in lower import dependence,

    China still imports natural gas via pipeline and as LNG. Second, China begins to export gas (to

    South Korea) beginning in 2016, rising to almost a billion cubic feet per day. The overall impact

    of lower import dependence and exports to South Korea substantially reduces demand for LNG

    imports in Asia (see Figure 12).

    Figure 9. China Natural Gas Balance, 2010-2040 (High China Shale Case)

    Figure 10 indicates the changes relative to the Reference Case associated with the assumptions

    regarding the technically recoverable shale resource base indicated in Table 3. The top panel in

    Figure 10 indicates a very large increase in shale gas production, which results in a decline in

    both LNG and pipeline imports. We also see that demand is higher due to lower prices (see

    Figure 11), and that China begins to export gas (by pipeline to South Korea).

    Higher shale gas production in China leaves it less exposed to potentially disruptive events in the

    Middle East and Russia. This follows because in the Reference Case, China becomes

    increasingly dependent on both the Middle East and Russia for both LNG and pipeline imports.

    Thus, to the extent that natural gas supplies can instead be sourced from domestic production,

    China is better off.

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    Figure 10. Changes in Supply Sources and Disposition Relative to Reference Case

    Sources of Supply

    Demand

    Exports

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    The benefits extend beyond Chinas borders as well. This is evidenced in Figure 11 through the

    impact that greater Chinese shale production has on prices. Asian prices are reduced by the

    greatest amount, but prices at both NBP and the Henry Hub are also reduced. This occurs as a

    result of the large reduction in LNG demand in Asia, which reduces competition for LNG

    imports. In fact, LNG imports to the U.S. and European nations increase (see Figure 13) in the

    High China Shale Case.

    Figure 11. Decadal Average Changes in Price Relative to Reference Case

    Figure 12. Changes in LNG Exports by Country Relative to Reference Case

    We also see that global LNG exports are generally lower as a result of greater shale production

    in China, a result that reinforces the point that Asian demand is the driver of LNG growth in the

    Reference Case. Figure 12 indicates that in 2040 about 85 percent of the reduction in LNG

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    exports falls on Iran, Qatar, Russia, and Venezuela. This is analogous to the point made in

    Medlock and Jaffe (2011) that shale resources tend to reduce the long-run market influence of

    Iran, Russia, and Venezuela.

    Figure 13. Changes in LNG Imports by Country Relative to Reference Case

    VI. Scenario AnalysisLow China Demand

    The recent experience of the Chinese economy has led many to predict very robust long-term

    average annual growth rates of the economy. This, in turn, yields very robust outlooks forChinese energy demand, and more specifically, natural gas demand. Given the impact that such

    strong growth has on global natural gas flows in the Reference Case, we examine a scenario in

    which demand growth in China is much less robust. We affect this change by assuming much

    slower economic growth. In the Reference Case, the average annual growth rate in GDP from

    2010 through 2030 is 5.6 percent, but in the Low China Demand Case the average annual growth

    rate in GDP is 2.9 percent.

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    Notes

    1. We would like to thank Energy Forum research associate Keily Miller for her

    invaluable help gathering information on water resources in China.

    2. National Petroleum Council, Balancing Natural Gas Policy: Fueling the Demands of a

    Growing Economy, September 2003.

    3. Navigant Consulting, North American Natural Gas Supply Assessment, July 4, 2008.

    4. The Potential Gas Committee, Potential Gas Committee Biennial Assessment, June

    18, 2009.

    5. World Shale Gas Resources: An Initial Assessment of 14 Regions outside the United

    States (report prepared by Advanced Resources International for the Energy Information

    Administration, April 2011).

    6. Kenneth B. Medlock III and Amy Myers Jaffe, Shale Gas and U.S. National Security

    (working paper, James A Baker III Institute for Public Policy, Rice University, May 2011).

    7. See Time Magazine cover story, The Gas Dilemma, April 11, 2011.

    8. See China and Water in Gleick, Cooley and Morikawa, The Worlds Water

    2008:2009: The Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources, Island Press, 2008. Available at

    http://www.worldwater.org/data20082009/ch05.pdf.

    9. Map replicated from Natural Gas Weekly Kaliedoscope, Barclays CapitalCommodities Research, November 16, 2010.

    10. The RWGTM has been developed by Kenneth B. Medlock III and Peter Hartley at

    Rice University using the Marketbuilder software provided through a research license with

    Deloitte Marketpoint, Inc. More details regarding the model is available upon request.

    11. Note, the debt-equity ratio is allowed to differ across different categories of

    investment (proving resources, developing wellhead delivery capability, constructing

    pipelines, and developing LNG infrastructure).

    12. We do not address these issues at length in this paper. Rather, we simply assume a

    lower growth rate to provide an outcome that yields substantially lower Chinese demand for

    natural gas. Note that we could also assume China, for a policy reason, chooses not to

    aggressively pursue natural gas. In either case, the result is lower demand.

    http://www.worldwater.org/data20082009/ch05.pdfhttp://www.worldwater.org/data20082009/ch05.pdf
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