As with the first wave of U.S. LNG export projects, the bulk of the second wave of capacity additions will be located along the U.S. Gulf Coast, and in particular, along a less-than-100-mile stretch of coastline in the northwestern corner of the Gulf of Mexico, between Port Arthur at the Texas-Louisiana border and the Mississippi River in southeastern Louisiana.

At full utilization of contracted capacity, feedgas demand at already-operational terminals in this section of the coastline totals ~8 Bcf/d (gray bar in the graph), or more than half of total U.S. feedgas deliveries. In addition, there are three projects that have reached final investment decisions and begun construction in the area: Golden Pass LNG, which is due to begin service in 2024; and two recently sanctioned greenfield facilities: Venture Global’s Plaquemines LNG and Sempra Energy’s Port Arthur LNG.

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