
Kinder Morgan plans to keep boosting its capacity to the Southeast and is moving forward with a 206-mile pipeline with an initial capacity of 1.5 Bcf/d. (Source: Shutterstock, Kinder Morgan)
Kinder Morgan (KMI) reached a final investment decision (FID) Dec. 19 for its $1.4 billion Mississippi Crossing Project (MSX), as the company pushes forward with plans to move more natural gas to the Southeast.
MSX will be a 206-mile, 42- and 36-inch pipeline with an initial capacity of up to 1.5 Bcf/d of natural gas.
The project faces direct competition from two other pipelines, one of which reached FID earlier in December.
“The additional supply will help satisfy growing energy demand and lower energy costs, allowing power generators and other energy suppliers in the region to attract new residential, commercial and industrial opportunities,” Sital Mody, Kinder Morgan’s president of natural gas pipelines, said in a press release.
The project will start near Greenville, Mississippi, and terminate near Butler, Alabama, with connections to KMI’s existing network and some third-party pipelines, the company said. Kinder Morgan is planning for an in-service date in November 2028.
![[MAP Kinder Morgan’s Mississippi Crossing Project (MSX). (Source: Kinder Morgan)]](/sites/default/files/inline-images/Mississippi%20Crossing%20Map.png)
Customers have secured all capacity on the line with long-term, binding agreements, KMI said.
Analysts have said the MSX pipeline will “directly compete” with the Boardwalk Pipeline’s Kosciusko Junction project, which reached FID on Dec. 11. Boardwalk’s pipeline is designed to transport natural gas from the Haynesville, Fayetteville and Appalachian shales to southeastern markets.
Boardwalk’s project has an in-service date just after KMI’s in the first half of 2029. Energy Transfer also has plans for the region and is progressing on its South Mississippi Project, which has not yet reached FID.
Kinder Morgan, with an eye on LNG and gas-fired power demand, has developed a strategy for a growing economy in the South. During the company’s third-quarter earnings call in October, KMI executives said MSX was one of two projects designed to feed growing southeast markets.
“We've been saying for a while that we've got a need for more molecules to move from west to east,” Mody said.
The other project, the Trident Intrastate Pipeline held an open season in October. The line would take natural gas in Texas from the Katy area to the Port Arthur region, where several LNG export projects are under development.
Kinder Morgan CEO Kim Dang added that with the MSX project, "KMI has sanctioned approximately $3.1 billion (KMI share) in expansion capital between the SNG South System 4 Expansion and TGP’s Mississippi Crossing Project. We expect to announce additional projects in the coming months.”
Recommended Reading
RWE Slashes Investment Upon Uncertainties in US Market
2025-03-20 - RWE introduced stricter investment criteria in the U.S. and cut planned investments by about 25% through 2030, citing regulatory uncertainties and supply chain constraints as some of the reason for the pullback.
TXO Partners CEO Bob R. Simpson to Retire
2025-03-20 - Gary D. Simpson and Brent W. Clum will serve as co-CEOs, effective April 1. Bob R. Simpson will remain chairman of the board, TXO said.
US Oil Company APA Lays Off Nearly 15% of Staff, Bloomberg News Reports
2025-03-19 - The news comes days after APA and its partners announced a successful oil discovery on their shared acreage in Alaska's North Slope.
NextEra Energy Resources CEO Rebecca Kujawa to Retire
2025-03-18 - NextEra Energy CFO Brian Bolster will become CEO for NextEra Energy Resources, and NextEra Energy Treasurer Mike Dunne will become CFO, the company says.
Williams Cos. COO Dunn to Retire
2025-03-13 - Williams Cos. COO Micheal Dunn was crediting with helping the company focus on a natural gas strategy.
Comments
Add new comment
This conversation is moderated according to Hart Energy community rules. Please read the rules before joining the discussion. If you’re experiencing any technical problems, please contact our customer care team.