Spot LNG shipping rates down, European and Asian prices up

Spot charter rates for the global liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier fleet decreased this week, while European and Asian prices rose compared to the week before.

Last week, Atlantic spot LNG freight rates dropped below $50,000 per day as the spot fixing window moved into the seasonally softer Q2 period.

“Spark freight rates fell further this week, with the Spark30S Atlantic spot rate falling by $2,000 to $47,750 per day, and the Spark25S Pacific rate falling by $4,750 per day to $53,500 per day,” Qasim Afghan, Spark’s commercial analyst, told LNG Prime on Friday.

He said these are the lowest freight rates reported since June 2023.

Image: Spark

LNG freight rates are continuing to decrease despite the fact that LNG carriers are still avoiding the Suez Canal due to the situation in the Red Sea.

Since January, LNG carriers, including Qatari vessels delivering LNG shipments to Europe, are favoring the Cape of Good Hope for safer passage.

Kpler said previously that the Suez Canal has witnessed no LNG transits since January 17.

In addition, due to a drought situation impacting the Panama Canal, LNG transits through the waterway keep declining as well.

Official data previously showed that LNG transits dropped to 326 in fiscal 2023 from 374 in 2022 and 537 in 2021.

European and Asian prices rise

In Europe, the SparkNWE DES LNG front month rose compared to the last week.

The NWE DES LNG for March delivery was assessed last week at $6.858/MMBtu.

“The SparkNWE DES LNG price is reported at $7.401/MMBtu, corresponding to a $0.543/MMBtu week-on-week increase,” Afghan said.

“This is the first week-on-week increase in 4 weeks, and the largest weekly gain since October 2023,” he said.

Image: Spark

Levels of gas in storages in Europe remain high for this time of the year due to mild weather.

Data by Gas Infrastructure Europe (GIE) shows that gas storages in the EU were 62.78 percent full on February 28. Gas storages were 64.69 percent full on February 22.

This week, JKM, the price for LNG cargoes delivered to Northeast Asia, rose when compared to the last week, according to Platts data.

JKM for April settled at $8.370/MMBtu on Thursday.

According to Platts, Chinese buyers are buying spot LNG cargoes due to low prices and to rebuild inventory after the Lunar New Year holiday.

Platts, part of S&P Global Commodity Insight, said in a report earlier this week that Chinese LNG buyers have engaged in “a flurry of purchasing” following the sharp decline in Asia-Pacific spot prices, with some 10 cargoes changing hands in the week ending February 23.

Most Popular

Update: Shell’s LNG Canada receives LNG cargo

Shell’s LNG Canada has received a cargo of liquefied natural gas as part of the commissioning and start-up phase.

DOE gives further boost to US LNG exports

The US Department of Energy (DOE) has removed a regulatory barrier that required liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects to start export within seven years of receiving regulatory approval.

Williams launches Transco pipeline expansions

US natural gas pipeline operator Williams has launched two fully contracted expansions of the existing Transco pipeline to meet growing domestic demand and LNG exports.

More News Like This

Atlantic LNG shipping rates, European prices down

Atlantic LNG freight shipping rates and European prices decreased this week compared to the week before.

Turkish and UK terminals remain top destinations for US LNG cargoes

LNG import terminals in Turkiye and the UK were the top destinations for US liquefied natural gas cargoes for the third month in a row in January 2025, according to the Department of Energy’s LNG monthly report.

Atlantic LNG shipping rates rise to $31,000 per day

Atlantic LNG freight rates rose to $31,000 per day this week, while European prices also increased compared to the prior week.

GECF says February LNG imports climb

Global liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports rose by 3.7 percent year-on-year in February, boosted by higher imports in Europe, the Gas Exporting Countries Forum said in its latest report.