Back on January 11 of this year, EQT announced that they entered into an informal tolling agreement to provide 65 MMcf/d in feedgas to the proposed Texas LNG facility in Brownsville. That amount was quadrupled to 260 MMcf/d with a subsequent agreement announced in April. These earlier Heads of Agreement (HOAs) have now been executed, and EQT is committed to supplying 260 MMcf/d to the facility for 20 years if it becomes operational. This amounts to half of Texas LNG’s overall liquefaction capacity.
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When the Going Gets Tough, Part 2 - The Halting Progress of U.S. LNG Export Projects
There’s a tough race underway among U.S. LNG developers jockeying for position in the global LNG market. U.S. supply growth has spurred the development of more than two dozen LNG export projects, the bulk of them along the Texas/Louisiana Gulf Coast. But regulatory bottlenecks and deepening oversupply conditions in international markets are creating strong headwinds and slowing the momentum for some of these massive projects, making it harder and harder for them to reach the regulatory and commercial milestones they need to pass before they can progress to the construction phase. That said, several projects have eked out big wins in recent weeks, including Tellurian’s $7.5 billion memorandum of understanding with India’s Petronet LNG Ltd for its Driftwood LNG project, signed just this past weekend, and LNG Ltd.’s 2-MMtpa sales and purchase agreement for its Magnolia LNG, inked early last week. Today, we provide highlights of recent regulatory and commercial developments that are pacing the proposed export capacity additions.
How Do You Like Me Now? - Who Are the Winners and Losers With Biden's LNG Permitting Pause?
The Biden administration’s recently announced decision to pause further action on new LNG export permits for at least several months sent shockwaves through the industry and shook up expectations regarding which projects will be hurt by — or benefit from — the pause. As we’ll discuss in today’s RBN blog, the decision is likely to put a number of Gulf Coast LNG export projects (one of them a real giant) in limbo, set back a Mexican project that would depend on Permian and Eagle Ford gas, and boost a couple of projects up in Canada. Oh, and there’s this: The pause also may help two avowed enemies of the U.S.: Russia and Iran.