Enstor, one of the largest privately owned natural gas storage companies in the United States, yesterday announced that it has signed an agreement to purchase Black Bear Transmission from Basalt Infrastructure Partners. Enstor operates six storage facilities across Texas, New Mexico, Mississippi and Alabama including the 23.5 Bcf Katy Storage facility (a major Gulf Coast pricing hub), two 20+ Bcf Salt Caverns (one in MS and one in AL), and an 18.5 Bcf depleted reservoir storage facility in Caledonia in Northern Mississippi. Black Bear is made up of several pipelines, primarily in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas. As shown in the map, below, several of Enstor's assests are within close proximity to the Black Bear lines.
Featured Articles
Ready to Let Go - Gulf Coast Gas Storage Activity Picks Up, and More Projects Are In the Works
Very little new natural gas storage capacity has been built along the Gulf Coast the past few years, but that’s changing. Driven by rising demand from power generators, LNG operators/offtakers, marketers and traders for storage with high deliverability rates — and by improving storage economics — new salt-cavern and depleted-reservoir capacity is now being developed by midstream players large and small, with plans for a lot more. In today’s RBN blog, we‘ll continue our review of gas storage projects in Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi with a look at what Kinder Morgan, EnLink Midstream and Enstor Gas have been up to.
Ready to Let Go - Players Are Making Moves in the Booming Gulf Coast Gas Storage Market
Rising demand for natural gas storage in the Gulf Coast region has spurred growing interest and investment. A number of midstream companies have been making moves, either by expanding their existing storage facilities in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama or entering the space with acquisitions or plans for greenfield projects. As a result, more than 150 Bcf of new gas storage space is in various stages of development. In today’s RBN blog, we discuss highlights from our new Drill Down Report on Gulf Coast gas storage.
Ready to Let Go - New Gulf Coast Gas Storage Coming Online, With Still More Capacity Being Planned
As a group, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama have more than 1.1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas storage capacity, most of it along — or within easy reach of — the Gulf Coast, with its long-and-growing list of LNG export terminals as well as gas-consuming industries and gas-fired power plants. That’s a good thing, but still more gas storage will be needed to help ensure there is sufficient gas in hand to meet the region’s rising — and increasingly volatile — requirements. In today’s RBN blog, we’ll continue our review of Gulf Coast storage projects with a look at plans by Trinity Gas Storage and Caliche Storage.