adubu, this is a good report on where Chenier stands in obtaining approval for export:
http://www.deweyleboeuf.com/~/media/Files/clientalerts/2011/2011052...
I think the confusion comes from the recent press releases about DOE approval.
Lithuanian Energy Minister Arvydas Sekmokas said the price offered by the United States' Cheniere Energy for gas supplies would be at least 25 percent lower than the country pays Gazprom.
Cheniere, the Houston-based liquefied natural gas terminal owner, is also considering an investment of as much as 20 percent in Lithuania's LNG terminal in Klaipeda, Sekmokas said Friday at a news conference in Vilnius.
Klaipedos Nafta, which operates Lithuania's oil terminal on the Baltic Sea, is negotiating possible gas supplies from Cheniere to help the country diversify from sole supplier Gazprom. The government is also in talks over gas imports from Norway and Qatar, Sekmokas said.
Klaipedos, which is 71 percent owned by the state, wants to build the country's first LNG terminal with a capacity of as much as 2.2 million tons. The terminal may cost 200 million euros ($284.8 million) and is expected to be online in 2014, Sekmokas said.
Prime Minister Andrius Kubilius said in the same news conference that the government is beginning the construction of the terminal on its own and may invite private investors in later stages of the project.
In researching the decades-old Tuscaloosa Trend and the immense wealth it has generated for many, I find it deeply troubling that this resource-rich formation runs directly beneath one of the poorest communities in North Baton Rouge—near Southern University, Louisiana—yet neither the university ( that I am aware of) nor local residents appear to have received any compensation for the minerals extracted from their land.
This area has suffered immense environmental degradation…
ContinuePosted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42
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