Vitalization of natural gas market in East Asia

A competitive gas-to-gas trading market has yet to emerge in Asia. Yet in spite of the various barriers and restrictions, the trend of liberalization seems to inevitable. How a natural gas trading market just might develop in East Asia is what this thesis explains and predicts. Moreover, it lays out...

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Main Author: Han, Sung-Hee
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
LNG
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5842
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2012-05-58422015-09-20T17:07:48ZVitalization of natural gas market in East AsiaHan, Sung-HeeNatural gasEast AsiaLiberalizationVitalizationLNGPipelineA competitive gas-to-gas trading market has yet to emerge in Asia. Yet in spite of the various barriers and restrictions, the trend of liberalization seems to inevitable. How a natural gas trading market just might develop in East Asia is what this thesis explains and predicts. Moreover, it lays out what the preconditions for the changes are, and what the costs and benefits from such changes may be. Considering Asia’s current market situation, the wholesale competition model could be a practical option for Asia’s gas markets. A critical role in building up the gas-to-gas trading market will be played by China. In the first stage of market liberalization, China alone can be expected to form its own trading hub on its east coast, say in Shanghai. If the transactions of the trading hub work smoothly and the set prices lower than oil-linked gas prices, then other gas-importing countries would likely join the trading hub by interconnecting with a physical pipeline.text2012-07-19T18:22:20Z2012-07-19T18:22:20Z2012-052012-07-19May 20122012-07-19T18:22:26Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-58422152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5842eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Natural gas
East Asia
Liberalization
Vitalization
LNG
Pipeline
spellingShingle Natural gas
East Asia
Liberalization
Vitalization
LNG
Pipeline
Han, Sung-Hee
Vitalization of natural gas market in East Asia
description A competitive gas-to-gas trading market has yet to emerge in Asia. Yet in spite of the various barriers and restrictions, the trend of liberalization seems to inevitable. How a natural gas trading market just might develop in East Asia is what this thesis explains and predicts. Moreover, it lays out what the preconditions for the changes are, and what the costs and benefits from such changes may be. Considering Asia’s current market situation, the wholesale competition model could be a practical option for Asia’s gas markets. A critical role in building up the gas-to-gas trading market will be played by China. In the first stage of market liberalization, China alone can be expected to form its own trading hub on its east coast, say in Shanghai. If the transactions of the trading hub work smoothly and the set prices lower than oil-linked gas prices, then other gas-importing countries would likely join the trading hub by interconnecting with a physical pipeline. === text
author Han, Sung-Hee
author_facet Han, Sung-Hee
author_sort Han, Sung-Hee
title Vitalization of natural gas market in East Asia
title_short Vitalization of natural gas market in East Asia
title_full Vitalization of natural gas market in East Asia
title_fullStr Vitalization of natural gas market in East Asia
title_full_unstemmed Vitalization of natural gas market in East Asia
title_sort vitalization of natural gas market in east asia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5842
work_keys_str_mv AT hansunghee vitalizationofnaturalgasmarketineastasia
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