The International Energy Agency said yesterday that natural gas was enjoying “a golden age” even if the growth in output over the next five years will be a lower-than-expected 2.4% instead of 2.7% forecast earlier.

The IEA’s Medium-Term Gas Market Report pointed out that shale discoveries in North America and China’s attempts to ease its reliance on polluting coal were boosting the relatively clean energy resource’s prospects.

“Even though we have revised our growth estimates downwards, the ‘Golden Age’ of gas remains in full swing,” said IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven as she presented the report during the Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum in Russia’s second city.

“Gas is already a major fuel in power generation, but the next five years will also see it emerging as a significant transportation fuel, driven by abundant supplies as well as concerns about oil dependency and air pollution,” she said.

The Paris-based intergovernmental organisation said it foresees the share of gas in the global primary energy mix rising to 4,000bn cubic metres (bcm) in 2018 from 3,427 bcm in 2012.

But it also conceded that gas faced certain “challenges” in various parts of the world.

It said that rising gas prices may force coal to regain some of its lost share of the market in the US.

The gas market in Europe meanwhile could suffer as the continent was registering only a “weak and partial” economic recovery while the Middle East was seeing a boom in domestic gas consumption that would put a curb on the region’s exports.

 

 

 

 

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