Plans for natural gas projects predicted to fail
Shell says rising costs and lower prices will make most scheduled export projects unfeasible

Only a fraction of the natural gas export projects being developed around the globe will become reality as high costs and weakening gas prices torpedo those that until recently promised huge returns on investment.

But high development costs and low profit margins in the gas sector mean most of the projects will fail, said Royal Dutch Shell's director of projects and technology.
"There is always so much talk about these big LNG projects around the world, but only a small fraction of them will get built," said Matthias Bichsel, who is also a member of Shell's executive committee.
"Costs in the oil and gas sector are still on the rise and outpacing inflation, and gas projects are extremely price-sensitive because the margins are so thin," he added.
European forward gas prices, which are used to make investment decisions for big pipeline and gas field projects, have dropped more than 15 per cent since the beginning of the year.