Essay, you are correct that ENN's business model indicates their need for additional LNG supply for China. In some cases LNG players will swap off cargos to save shipping costs or meet other needs. So ENN could receive supply indirectly by swapping Sabine Pass cargos for some Australia sourced cargos with someone that needs LNG supplies for Belgium.
Initially I did not realize ENN was the former XinAo Gas. I actually met two LNG buyers from that company at a conference in Malaysia about 3 years ago. One of their business lines is NGV's.
The FERC has authorized two other terminal in addition to Cheniere in Texas to Export LNG--- both in La. --Sabine and Hackberry
Adubu, the following terminals have FERC authority to "re-export" imported LNG.
Sabine Pass (Louisiana)
Cameron (Louisiana)
Freeport (Texas)
Adubu, Cheniere owns & operates Sabine Pass LNG - not Freeport LNG. The Cameon LNG project is not known as Hackberry. Your original note used the term export which may implied by some to mean export of US sourced natural gas.
By the way, FERC has not yet indicated if they will authorize the Sabine Pass LNG export project. We should know in late 2011.
Ok, you guys, give us "rubes" a crash course in natural gas exports.
Question, Haynesville Shale Gas is not liquified, right? So, do these ports have a process to liquify and then export this gas? Treat me like a first grader on this one. I can't be the only one who doesn't get this whole concept
KCM, you are correct that Haynesville Shale gas is not liquified.
None of the three LNG terminals currently have the ability to liquify natural gas deliveried to the terminal. Instead they simply reload LNG onto a ship that was imported at an earlier date by ship for storage. The was not a service originally planned for the terminals as the intent was to vaporize the imported LNG and deliver to the gas pipeline.
Currently two of the terminals (Sabine Pass & Freeport) have announced plans to install liquefaction facilities so they can export US produced natural gas delivered to the terminal. Neither project has yet started construction.
By the way, it is unlikely the exported natural gas would include Haynesville Shale production unless new pipelines are installed that would connect the region to the terminals.
From Cheniere's website:
Access to Gas Supply
Cheniere’s Sabine Pass LNG facility in Cameron Parish, Louisiana, is ideally situated to capitalize on continued unconventional gas development. The Gulf Coast and Midcontinent regions contain five of the six major US shale plays, including the Barnett, Haynesville, Woodford, Fayetteville/Arkoma, and Eagle Ford, and three of the largest tight-sands plays, including the East Texas, Anadarko and Gulf Coast plays. The natural gas productive capacity in this region therefore represents a major portion of current and future U.S. production. Advanced Resources International, in a report commissioned for Cheniere's DOE filing, states that in 2010 about half of U.S. unconventional productive capacity (nearly 19 Bcfd) was sourced from the Gulf Coast/Mid-Continent corridor.
A number of large-diameter interstate pipelines have been built in recent years to connect these emerging unconventional basins to major gas market hubs, particularly in the Perryville area of northeastern Louisiana. The Sabine Pass LNG Terminal can deliver to and potentially receive natural gas from eleven interstate and intrastate pipeline systems in the Gulf Coast. These pipelines will allow Sabine Pass and its customers to purchase and receive gas from the emerging unconventional basins, as well as the historically prolific Gulf Coast Texas and Louisiana onshore gas fields.
Les, are you thinking that it would be Eagle Ford gas and the Haynesville and others would fill the domestic void that would be left?
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