Malaysia expects natural gas to overtake coal as its main source of power only in the next decade.
SINGAPORE: Malaysia boosted natural gas-fired power generation and slashed reliance on coal in December last year, grid operator data analysed by Reuters shows, as rising production bolstered local supply and helped expand liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports.
Gas-fired power generation accounted for most of a nearly 5% rise in electricity supplied to Peninsular Malaysia in December, making up for a 4.3% decline in coal-fired output, real-time data from Malaysia’s Grid System Operator (GSO) showed.
Reuters analyses that data to break it into monthly output figures that are not released publicly by the GSO.
The South-East Asian nation of 35 million, however, expects natural gas to overtake coal as its main source of power only in the next decade. As gas use increases, Malaysia – now the No.5 global LNG exporter – also expects to significantly boost its imports of the superchilled fuel in four to five years.
“The reliance on gas for power generation is expected to increase gradually, with a more meaningful shift occurring only after 2030,” said Prateek Pandey, head of Asia-Pacific oil and gas research at consultancy Rystad Energy.
Malaysia’s Energy Commission, which regulates the grid operator, and the GSO did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Reuters’ analysis of the data.
Gas use in Peninsular Malaysia – which accounts for about 80% of national electricity demand – rose 28.4% in December last year on an annual basis, the second straight monthly increase, the analysis of the GSO data showed.
That followed an 11.8% rise in Malaysia’s natural gas output in the quarter through September last year from a year earlier, the fastest in three years, according to government statistics.
The rise in gas output also helped to pull down Malaysia’s 2025 LNG imports, which fell 29% to 2.26 million tonnes – the lowest in four years – while exports rose to a record 28.25 million tonnes, data from analytics firm Kpler showed.
Malaysia’s gas production, though, is expected to plateau or start declining towards the end of this decade, analysts said, just as the country likely enters a period of steady growth in gas-fired generation.
Power consumption in Peninsular Malaysia has been rising in recent years due to a surge in demand from energy-guzzling data centres, pushing it to crank up reliance on coal-fired power. — Reuters
