Stranded or Strategic: The Future of Global LNG Assets
AI may be the new demand driver, but LNG has been the supply-side story of the past year. In Q1 2025, Energy Considered’s 5,000 tracked key opinion leaders referenced LNG 717 times in their commentary, framing it as the indispensable stabiliser that kept Europe’s lights on after the Russian gas shock. Imports surged by around 25% year-on-year in Q1 driven by record U.S. exports and nearly 40% by mid-2025, with the U.S. supplying more than 50% of the incremental growth As we tracked Jason Bordoff (Founding Director, Centre on Global Energy Policy, Columbia SIPA) warned in Foreign Policy, “the U.S. should not politicize LNG exports” a reminder that LNG had become a cornerstone of Europe’s energy security, not just a commercial trade. That positioning elevated LNG from commodity to geopolitical asset.
By the second Quarter, mentions dipped to 607, and the tone shifted. Our tracked policymakers and scholars began to warn that what looked like security today could become climate and economic risk tomorrow. Prices peaking near $16/MMBtu in Asia had already exposed vulnerable buyers, while Europe’s aggressive procurement squeezed out China and India, whose imports fell by more than 20%. As Energy Considered’s spotlighted voice Michael Bradshaw (Petroleum Economist and Professor at the University of War) observed, “the build-out of LNG infrastructure provides a potential anti-hero story” indispensable in the moment but raising hard questions about carbon lock-in and stranded assets.