Letter from Qatar: Greater purpose and direction for LNG
The global gas industry is no longer on the backfoot, hesitantly justifying the value of its product, but has greater confidence in gas remaining a core part of the global energy mix for decades
The prevailing mood at the LNG2026 conference, held on 2–5 February in Doha, was one of renewed confidence—both in the gas industry’s sense of purpose and in its long-term direction. This marked a clear shift from the atmosphere at LNG2023 in Vancouver three years earlier, when the industry appeared uncertain about its priorities and future role. At that time, soaring energy prices—driven by Russia’s weaponisation of gas supplies to Europe and years of underinvestment—had pushed energy security to the forefront. Yet there was far less clarity about the durability of gas demand. Industry leaders stressed the urgent need for new supply, but there was greater doubt about how long that supply wo
Also in this section
14 April 2026
The GECF has warned it may revise its projections for demand this year downwards in light of conflict in the Middle East, although it maintains its forecasts for 2027 and onwards
13 April 2026
Petroleum Economist analysis highlights sharp shift from crude oversupply to market deficit, with Iraq and Kuwait badly affected and key producers Saudi Arabia and the UAE also seeing output sharply lower
13 April 2026
Turkmenistan is moving ahead with a modest expansion of the giant Galkynysh field to sustain gas deliveries abroad, but persistent delays to other key pipeline projects and geopolitical risks continue to constrain its export ambitions
13 April 2026
Expensive electricity has forced out swathes of energy-intensive industry and now threatens the country’s ability to attract future investment in datacentres and the digital economy






