Gas Aggregation as a Regulatory Model to Promote Improved Security of Domestic Gas Supply
Abstract
This paper analyzes the role that can be played by aggregation as a regulatory model for the effective
structuring of a country’s gas sector, with a focus on how aggregation has functioned and is and could
be functioning, in certain countries.
Aggregation, in one form or another, has enjoyed a colorful history in the regulatory shaping of several
gas sectors. It has been applied successfully to the definition of nascent gas sectors in Trinidad and
Tobago and the United Kingdom. Aggregation has been applied, with varying degrees of success, to the
re-regulation of gas sectors in Singapore, Ghana and Tanzania; it has been threatened to be applied in
Israel and Indonesia; and it has almost certainly failed in Nigeria.
Aggregation is but one of a number of regulatory models that can be used to structure the gas sector
within a country’s wider economy, and is the particular focus of this paper. This paper recognizes
that there is no single or preferred model for the optimum regulation of the gas sector within any
particular country, and different countries could take different views as to what they believe to be the
most suitable regulatory model for their own particular gas sectors. This paper also recognizes that
neither is there anything as simple as an agreed menu of established regulatory models for gas sector
structuring, from which an appropriate selection can be made.
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Turner, Paul, and Anthony Barker, Singapore—Emergence of a new LNG market and the role of the aggregator (http://www.gastechnology.org/Training/Documents/LNG17-proceedings/1-1-Anthony_Barker.pdf). See also https://www.ema.gov.sg/LNG_Procurement.aspx.
Yuniza, Mailinda Eka, Adhika Widyaparaga, Rifky Wicaksono and Putu Shanti Krisnadevi, Natural gas aggregation and the opportunity for synchronization under Indonesian Law, Journal of World Energy Law and Business, 9, 388–409 (2016).