With the attempts of governments across the world to cut down on greenhouse gas emissions, natural gas is seeing an ever higher demand and natural gas prices, as per the latest IGU report, are proving to be strikingly low. This, in addition to the fact that the world has in excess of 7,000 trillion cubic meters of natural gas is a key driving factor in rapidly developing the natural gas production infrastructure that we are actually seeing today. In addition, the same report has also shown a whopping 35% increase in the demand for natural gas, which especially due to the existing climate change policies is a tendency that we will surely also see in the natural gas price analysis for 2020. This same fact has also prompted a rapid flood of investments in infrastructure, but even so we're far behind the approx. $470 billion per year estimated to be what's necessary to meet this growing demand.
Furthermore, natural gas trading is also seeing gas become more of an international commodity akin to petroleum. An increasing diversification of the market (which still does have a long way to go) is already making prices more competitive in different regions of the world, comparing to other resources. For instance, the natural gas chart analysis for China has always demonstrated immensely higher figures in contrast to those for coal. That, however, has been changing very quickly, and the same is true for the natural gas price analysis in India as well.
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