Will China and India really be big markets for LNG?
Coal’s resilience and a stronger push for renewables may dampen the countries’ enthusiasm for seaborne gas
ASIA’s two largest emerging economies are unlikely to become the heavyweight markets for liquefied natural gas that exporters hope. A combination of overcapacity and stranded assets in coal-fired power generation and a friendly regulatory environment for solar and wind will temper the need for imported natural gas. The two countries are shifting away from coal, but towards renewables. India and China are both strongly favouring the deployment of renewable energy, even as their enormous coal-fired-electricity sectors struggle with a glut of plants and falling utilisation. Plans for new fossil-fired units are being curtailed in an effort to cure the overhang of underused and even stranded asse
Also in this section
13 March 2026
Brussels is again weighing a cap on gas prices amid the Hormuz crisis, but the measure could backfire by deterring the LNG cargoes Europe urgently needs
12 March 2026
Emergency oil stocks provide a last line of defence to oil market shocks, so the IEA’s unprecedented 400m bl release represents something of a double-edged sword
12 March 2026
LPG could rapidly expand access to clean cooking across Africa and prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths from indoor air pollution each year, but infrastructure shortages and regulatory barriers are slowing investment and market growth
11 March 2026
Missiles over Dubai and disruption in Hormuz are testing the emirate’s reputation—and shaking the energy hub at the centre of the Gulf economy






