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Peru is struggling to go green with natural gas
LIMA: Peru, a sizeable oil producer in the 1970s, is rediscovering its energy export potential but its natural gas output may end up like its gourmet coffee beans – in abundance abroad, hard to find at home.
Peru, which aims to export natural gas to Mexico from 2010 and eventually to the US and Chile, is failing to tap its reserves for domestic use and put an end to pollution-belching oil-powered buses, cars and factories.
“The conversion to gas in industry has been limited and the conversion for domestic use is almost nil,” Cesar Gutierrez, president of state energy company PetroPeru, told Reuters.
Since Peru’s Camisea gas field began pumping gas to Lima in August 2004, politicians and business leaders have praised gas as giving the nation energy independence and a cleaner future.
But Peru, a mountainous country twice the size of Texas, only has one pipeline to transport the gas and the private sector has not stepped up to promote more, despite reserves that would cover nationwide consumption for two decades.
Many of the vehicles on Peru’s roads date from the 1980s and run on dirty, high sulphur content gasoline and diesel that the Andean nation produces. Peruvians are eager to change to cheaper natural gas, but few highway stations oblige.
At around $1,200, the cost of converting a vehicle  to  natural  gas  from  gasoline is high and  many  criticise  the  government  for  not providing proper subsidies.
“There are very few places to fill up at, especially outside Lima, and the queues are often long,” said bank executive Mario Quispe, filling up on natural gas in Lima.
Peru has almost 12tn cu ft of proven gas reserves. Potential new deposits could lift its deposits to 37.6tn cu ft, according to government data.
That makes Peru one of South America’s principal gas producers along with Venezuela, with 150tn cu ft of reserves, and Bolivia, with almost 50tn cu ft.
Still, Colombia, with around 7tn cu ft, has done a much better job of developing its natural gas for local use and cutting its greenhouse emissions, analysts say.
Gutierrez of PetroPeru blames French conglomerate Suez, which has exclusive distribution rights for the Camisea gas reserves in Peru, for not doing enough to allow more factories, restaurants and households to use local gas.
“Suez’ vision is very European and focused on big clients, it has a lot to learn from Colombia,” Gutierrez said. “In Colombia they have sold gas inventively and have successfully focused on low-income consumers. When customers asked for gas connections, they also gave them gas cookers for free. They created a market, they created demand,” he added. – Reuters
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