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Web posted at: 11/1/2007 7:17:32
Source ::: The Peninsula
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H E Mohamed Saleh Al Sada and Yadira Garcia Vera at the concluding session of the 6th Doha Conference on Natural Gas yesterday. |
DOHA
• Qatar, the world's top liquefied natural gas
(LNG) producer, said yesterday that clean fuel
can be confidently looked at as a source of
energy which ensures secure supplies amid
growing concern over supply uncertainties the
world over.
Besides being environment-friendly, LNG can help
ease volatility, meet seasonal demand and ensure
secure supplies, Qatar's Minister of State for
Energy and Industry, H E Mohamed Saleh Al Sada,
said.
This is not the case with the piped gas market,
for instance, which frequently moves up and down
due to a host of factors, Al Sada told delegates
at the 6th Doha Conference on Natural Gas which
concluded at the Doha Sheraton yesterday.
Present at the closing ceremony was Cuba's Basic
Industry Minister, Yadira Garcia Vera, who also
addressed the audience.
Al Sada said the demand for LNG was tipped to
grow uninterruptedly over at least the next two
decades, creating opportunities as well as
challenges for project financiers, buyers and
sellers.
"Today, energy security is the most hotly
debated issue the world over and consuming
countries are desperately looking to diversify
supply sources to ensure security," he said.
There is also talk of de-coupling gas prices
from those of oil, he pointed out, implying that
the importance of gas as an alternative to the
conventional fuel was growing.
Qatar, he reiterated, had taken the lead in
creating the world's largest LNG train and the
biggest LNG vessel.
The country has a comprehensive plan in place to
address issues related to the environment as
concerns about global warming and climate change
mount the world over.
The 6th Doha Conference, the minister said,
provided an opportunity to get views of a
cross-section of people from the global natural
gas industry, environmentalists, those concerned
with work place safety, academics and technology
leaders on key issues linked to the sector.
Vera in her address raised concerns over
depleting proven crude and gas reserves
worldwide and lambasted what she described was
irrational consumption by "most developed and
powerful economies", which, she said, was
aggravated by speculation which led to social,
economic and political turmoil.
She said natural gas assumed more significance
as oil prices were soaring beyond the reach of
weaker economies. The other most important issue
is related to the environment and clearly,
natural gas is a much cleaner fuel, said the
Cuban minister.
Vera lauded Qatar's role in gas production and
setting up petrochemical industries. "Our small
country makes great efforts to encourage
important energy-saving projects and one of them
is to maximise the use of associated gas
extracted from our oil fields," she said.
She reminded the conference delegates of the UN
General Assembly's recent approval by
overwhelming majority a resolution calling for
the need to cease the economic, commercial and
financial blockade imposed by the United States
on Cuba. |