Strait of Hormuz Disruptions Drive Down Petronet LNG Stock

Strait of Hormuz Disruptions Drive Down Petronet LNG Stock.webp

New Delhi, March 4 Shares of gas importer Petronet LNG Ltd plunged by nearly 12 per cent on Wednesday amid reports that Qatar, India's largest supplier of imported natural gas, has declared force majeure on deliveries following a halt in production in the wake of an Iranian drone strike.

The stock fell by 11.69 per cent to Rs 273 on the BSE.

At the NSE, it dropped by 11.95 per cent to Rs 271.75.

Qatar has declared force majeure on deliveries following a halt in production in the wake of an Iranian drone strike — a disruption that has led to a cut in supplies to the Indian industry by up to 40 per cent, sources said.

Qatar supplies approximately 40 per cent of the nearly 27 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas (LNG) that India imports annually to meet demand across sectors ranging from power generation and fertiliser production to CNG distribution and piped cooking gas networks.

Petronet LNG Ltd has informed gas marketers that Qatar is halting its liquefied natural gas production after Iran continued to strike Gulf countries in retaliation for Israeli and US strikes against it, they said.

Shares of Mahanagar Gas fell by 8.50 per cent, Indraprastha Gas dropped by 5 per cent, and Gujarat Gas declined by 4 per cent on the BSE.

The attacks have also effectively brought oil and LNG shipments through the Strait of Hormuz to a near halt, driving up global energy prices as well as sharply raising war-risk insurance and shipping costs.

Iran controls the Strait — a vital maritime chokepoint through which roughly 50 per cent of India's crude oil imports and around 54 per cent of its LNG supplies transit. It is the transit for not just LNG from Qatar but also from the UAE.

Sources said Petronet has informed its gas offtakers — GAIL (India) Ltd and Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), about a halt in supplies from Qatar. The gas marketers have, in turn, cut supplies to industries while maintaining flow rates for CNG retailing.

The cuts range from 10 per cent to 40 per cent, they said.

Petronet has a long-term contract to buy 8.5 million tonnes per annum of LNG from Qatar. Additionally, it also buys Qatari LNG from the spot market. Besides Petronet, companies such as IOC have LNG import contracts with the UAE.
 
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cng energy imports fertilizer production force majeure gail (india) ltd gas supply india indian oil corporation (ioc) iranian drone strike liquefied natural gas (lng) natural gas petronet lng ltd power generation qatar strait of hormuz
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