- Analyst Insight

Production Begins at Woodside’s Beaumont New Ammonia Facility

Ammonia production has begun at Woodside Energy’s Beaumont New Ammonia facility in southeast Texas following the completion of systems testing, representing the first phase of operations commissioning of the facility, the company said. Commercial production of ammonia from the facility is expected to begin following handover to Woodside from OCI Global in early 2026, with production of blue ammonia targeted to start in H2 2026. 

- Blog

You Need to Calm Down – Increasing Texas/Louisiana Production to Feed Ever-Growing List of LNG Plants

Several large-scale LNG export projects have reached a final investment decision this year along the U.S. Gulf Coast, with most expected to start up between 2029 and 2031. They will be supported by new pipeline capacity to deliver natural gas from producing areas, but how and where will production increase to meet this new demand? In today’s RBN blog, we detail the movement of gas throughout Texas and Louisiana and highlight the key findings in the newest edition of our Arrow Model.

- Blog

I’m Back (Back in the LNG Groove), Encore Edition - How Woodside's FID on Louisiana LNG Shakes Things Up

Woodside Energy’s final investment decision (FID) on the $17.5 billion Louisiana LNG terminal was a stunner. For one thing, only 1 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa) of the project’s 16.5 MMtpa (2.2 Bcf/d) of capacity is under contract — U.S. LNG export projects typically have commitments for two-thirds or more of their output before pulling the trigger. The project will also have an outsized impact on gas flows in a region already struggling to keep up, and it may well upend plans for other projects in the works. In today’s RBN blog, we take a closer look at Louisiana LNG, Woodside’s daring development approach, and the terminal’s impacts on gas demand, gas flows and pre-FID projects. 

- Blog

I’m Back (Back in the LNG Groove) - How Woodside's FID on Louisiana LNG Shakes Things Up

Woodside Energy’s final investment decision (FID) on the $17.5 billion Louisiana LNG terminal was a stunner. For one thing, only 1 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa) of the project’s 16.5 MMtpa (2.2 Bcf/d) of capacity is under contract — U.S. LNG export projects typically have commitments for two-thirds or more of their output before pulling the trigger. The project will also have an outsized impact on gas flows in a region already struggling to keep up, and it may well upend plans for other projects in the works. In today’s RBN blog, we take a closer look at Louisiana LNG, Woodside’s daring development approach, and the terminal’s impacts on gas demand, gas flows and pre-FID projects.