Latin American LNG demand dries up
The return of hydropower, economic pain and cheaper alternatives are dampening regional LNG consumption
LATIN America has emerged as an important liquefied natural gas market in recent years. But the region’s demand for the supercooled fuel will reverse over the course of this year, with Brazil, Argentina and Mexico all likely to take less LNG. Slowing regional demand will put pressure on producers Trinidad & Tobago and Peru, which will also have to contend with the arrival of US LNG. Brazil has emerged as a major LNG buyer in recent years. Gas is a marginal fuel in Brazil, typically used to plug gaps in power demand when hydropower output falls. Severe drought has sapped output from the country’s hydropower base in recent years, leading to a surge in gas demand. LNG imports have been used
Also in this section
24 March 2026
It is an unusual story of out with the new and in with the old, as America First Refining shows the US going back to trusted energy security developments
23 March 2026
A complex and sometimes contradictory web of factors that include unpredictable oil prices, the globalisation of LNG markets, the expansion of Middle Eastern sovereign capital and the growth of datacentre demand will shape the energy landscape beyond 2026
23 March 2026
The Strait of Hormuz crisis highlights how key waterways can become global chokepoints
20 March 2026
Attacks on key oil and LNG assets across the Gulf mean a prolonged supply disruption, with damage to Qatar’s export capacity undermining confidence in the global gas system






