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United Arab Emirates Building Natural Gas Receiving Terminal

posted on: Mar 20, 2012

An energy company in the United Arab Emirates said Tuesday it is developing a terminal to receive liquefied natural gas supplies on the country’s eastern coast, bypassing the strategically sensitive Strait of Hormuz.

The new terminal will be located in the port city of Fujairah, which unlike most of the country faces the Gulf of Oman. That would likely put it out of reach of any attempt by Iran to block tanker traffic in and out of the strait.

LNG is chilled natural gas converted to a liquid for easier transport on specially designed supertankers. Although the UAE is OPEC’s third-largest oil exporter, it must import natural gas to meet domestic energy needs.

Mubadala Development Co.’s oil and gas division confirmed in a brief statement that it is working on the project, though it declined to discuss how much gas the facility will handle. Financial details weren’t disclosed.

Mubadala is owned by the government of Abu Dhabi, the capital of the UAE and the largest and richest of the federation’s seven emirates.

It expects the terminal to receive its first supplies in two to three years.

The Fujairah terminal will be based around what is known as a floating LNG storage and regasification unit — effectively a stationary ship that holds and converts the fuel back into gas before piping it onshore.

Leslie Palti-Guzman, a natural gas expert for the consulting firm Eurasia Group, said that type of terminal is a “convenient, fast-track solution to get gas” and takes less time to install than a similar facility on land.

The development of the plant is likely motivated more by the Emirates’ growing domestic power needs than political tensions in the region, though the location outside the Gulf makes sense, she said.

“Being on the other side of the Strait of Hormuz is really advantageous from a geopolitical point of view,” she said.

Much of the UAE’s existing gas imports come through the Dolphin pipeline, a joint venture between Mubadala, Total SA and Occidental Petroleum Corp. that connects the Emirates with neighboring Qatar and Oman.

Iran has repeatedly threatened to shut the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation over U.S. and European-led efforts to thwart its disputed nuclear program. The West and others fear Iran is trying to produce nuclear weapons, but Tehran says it only seeks reactors for energy and medical research.

The strait is the route for a fifth of the world’s oil exports. It is also a key transit route for natural gas exports, particularly from Qatar, the world’s largest LNG supplier.

Associated Press