Indonesian Liquified Natural Gas Monthly Price - Malaysian Ringgit per Million Metric British Thermal Unit

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: 26.215 (80.75%)
Chart

Description: Natural gas LNG (Japan), import price, cif, recent two months' averages are estimates.

Unit: Malaysian Ringgit per Million Metric British Thermal Unit



Source: World Gas Intelligence; World Bank.

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Indonesian liquefied natural gas (LNG) is natural gas cooled to a liquid state for marine transport and regasification at destination terminals. In commodity markets, it is commonly referenced through contract prices for deliveries to Japan, quoted in U.S. dollars per million British thermal units (MMBtu). This pricing convention reflects the energy content of the cargo rather than its volume, which makes it comparable with pipeline gas and other LNG benchmarks. Indonesian LNG is typically associated with long-term export contracts and Asian import demand, especially in Japan, where LNG has long served as a flexible fuel for power generation, industrial heat, and city gas supply. Because LNG is a traded gas rather than a refined product, its market value is shaped by liquefaction costs, shipping distance, destination terminal access, and the broader balance between regional gas supply and demand. It also competes with other gaseous and liquid fuels in power and industrial applications, making it an important reference point for gas-market analysis.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by the geology of natural gas fields, the pace of reservoir depletion, and the capital intensity of liquefaction infrastructure. Indonesia’s LNG export capacity depends on upstream gas production from mature basins and offshore fields, where output can decline without continued drilling and field maintenance. LNG supply is also constrained by the long lead times required to develop gas discoveries, build liquefaction trains, and secure export terminals, pipelines, and storage. Because LNG must be chilled, loaded, shipped, and regasified, any bottleneck in the chain can limit effective supply even when gas is available underground.

Indonesia’s tropical climate and archipelagic geography add transport complexity, making pipeline gathering systems, coastal terminals, and shipping logistics especially important. Maintenance outages, reservoir pressure decline, and the need for compression or enhanced recovery can all affect export availability. Unlike seasonal agricultural commodities, LNG supply is not harvested, but it is still cyclical because gas fields and liquefaction plants undergo planned maintenance and because upstream production responds slowly to price signals. Long-term supply is therefore governed by resource quality, infrastructure reliability, and the economics of replacing declining reserves.

Demand Drivers

Demand for Indonesian LNG is driven primarily by power generation, industrial fuel use, and city gas systems in importing countries, especially in East Asia. Japan has historically relied on LNG because it is a low-emission combustion fuel relative to coal and oil and because it can be delivered by ship to an island market without domestic pipeline links to major gas basins. LNG is also used as a balancing fuel in electricity systems, where it supports peak demand and complements intermittent generation from wind and solar. This makes demand sensitive to weather, electricity load, and the availability of competing fuels.

Substitution is an important feature of LNG demand. In power and industrial boilers, LNG competes with coal, fuel oil, and in some cases pipeline gas. In regions with flexible generation fleets, relative fuel prices influence dispatch decisions and contract renewals. Demand also reflects broader industrial activity, since gas is used in chemicals, refining, metals, and manufacturing. Seasonal heating demand matters in colder importing markets, while summer electricity demand can lift gas burn in warmer regions. Over the long run, efficiency improvements, electrification, and changes in power-generation technology shape consumption patterns, but LNG remains structurally important where secure maritime supply and flexible fuel switching are valued.

Macro and Financial Drivers

As a dollar-denominated energy commodity, Indonesian LNG is influenced by the U.S. dollar exchange rate: a stronger dollar tends to raise local-currency costs for importers and can affect demand at the margin. LNG pricing also responds to interest rates and financing conditions because liquefaction plants, shipping fleets, and terminal infrastructure require large upfront capital expenditures. Storage and transport costs matter as well, since LNG must remain in specialized tanks and carriers, and the economics of moving cargoes across oceans affect regional price differentials.

Like other energy commodities, LNG can exhibit contango or backwardation depending on the balance between immediate supply tightness and future availability. Because LNG is difficult and costly to store relative to many physical commodities, nearby contract pricing can be sensitive to shipping constraints, terminal outages, and seasonal demand swings. Broader macroeconomic activity matters through industrial gas consumption, while correlations with crude oil and coal often arise because these fuels compete in power generation and long-term contract pricing formulas.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 202132.46-
Apr 202134.155.18%
May 202136.817.79%
Jun 202139.788.07%
Jul 202143.509.35%
Aug 202145.594.80%
Sep 202147.714.65%
Oct 202151.538.01%
Nov 202163.6623.54%
Dec 202164.641.54%
Jan 202261.54-4.80%
Feb 202271.1915.69%
Mar 202263.48-10.84%
Apr 202269.509.49%
May 202273.155.24%
Jun 202268.36-6.55%
Jul 202283.8622.68%
Aug 202294.7212.95%
Sep 2022107.9113.92%
Oct 2022102.50-5.01%
Nov 202290.85-11.37%
Dec 202290.81-0.04%
Jan 202387.42-3.73%
Feb 202380.59-7.81%
Mar 202371.63-11.12%
Apr 202363.55-11.28%
May 202360.84-4.27%
Jun 202358.78-3.38%
Jul 202359.601.40%
Aug 202357.78-3.05%
Sep 202357.14-1.11%
Oct 202359.914.84%
Nov 202359.64-0.45%
Dec 202367.4313.08%
Jan 202467.18-0.38%
Feb 202465.09-3.11%
Mar 202462.19-4.44%
Apr 202456.63-8.94%
May 202457.361.29%
Jun 202457.13-0.41%
Jul 202458.412.24%
Aug 202458.840.73%
Sep 202455.18-6.21%
Oct 202453.87-2.39%
Nov 202456.895.62%
Dec 202456.32-1.00%
Jan 202558.974.71%
Feb 202556.78-3.73%
Mar 202555.67-1.95%
Apr 202555.990.58%
May 202552.56-6.12%
Jun 202551.63-1.79%
Jul 202552.752.17%
Aug 202549.83-5.53%
Sep 202548.32-3.04%
Oct 202546.79-3.16%
Nov 202546.37-0.90%
Dec 202546.32-0.11%
Jan 202646.630.67%
Feb 202644.32-4.95%
Mar 202658.6832.39%

Top Companies

Royal Dutch Shell
Website: http://www.shell.com/
Location: Hague, Netherlands
Estimated Production: 3.5 million tonnes per year

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