New Fortress Energy (NFE) shipped its first cargo from its Fast LNG 1 project, an offshore development located in the Gulf of Mexico, about 275 miles from the southern tip of Texas.
On Aug. 9, the company released the news via a video on YouTube, celebrating the accomplishment. New Fortress develops modular liquefication facilities. The Fast LNG 1 project pairs the modular design with an offshore facility.
“The milestone of first cargo is important because we have now proven the concept of fast LNG being an innovative approach for producing liquefied natural gas by combining modular topside facilities with pre-existing substructures,” Barry Clayton, director of operations at Fast LNG 1, said in the video.
The cargo will take an international route to a domestic destination: Mexico’s gas-starved Pacific coast. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the tanker, Energos Princess, was expected to pass through the Panama Canal before delivering the load to a Mexico LNG import terminal on the Baja Peninsula.
The U.S. Department of Energy has regulatory authority over Fast LNG 1 because it is fed by the offshore Sur de Texas-Tuxpan Pipeline, which is owned by TC Energy (TRP) and ships natural gas from the U.S.
The DOE authorized 430 MMcf/d of exports from the facility to countries with which the U.S. has a free-trade agreement (FTA). New Fortress is currently seeking DOE’s permission to ship up to 400 MMcf/d to non-FTA countries.
Prior to announcing the shipment, New Fortress said the facility was not complete and that full operations may commence “substantially later than the date of first cargo.”
Mexico has one LNG terminal currently under construction on its west coast: The $1.2 billion Energia Costa Azul LNG project, expected to be completed in the first half of 2026. Five other west coast LNG projects are under development in the country, although none have reached final investment decisions.
For now, the Fast LNG 1 terminal will serve customers primarily on Mexico’s Pacific coast, according to an Aug. 16 analysis by East Daley Analytics. The shipments will eventually provide feed gas to several power plants in Baja, a region with limited gas pipeline infrastructure that often relies on oil-fired power generation to meet its electricity needs.
East Daley said the LNG project’s start-up will increase demand for several natural gas pipeline systems in the South Texas Agua Dulce area. Two pipelines, the Sur de Texas-Tuxpan and Enbridge’s Valley Crossing Pipeline, will especially benefit from the extra traffic.
The Valley Crossing line interconnects with the Sur De Texas at the U.S.-Mexico border. East Daley forecast that the extra traffic created by the Fast LNG project will stabilize demand on a system that has historically seen volatile earnings from seasonal demand and international price fluctuations.
Recommended Reading
Twenty Years Ago, Range Jumpstarted the Marcellus Boom
2024-11-06 - Range Resources launched the Appalachia shale rush, and rising domestic power and LNG demand can trigger it to boom again.
Utica Oil E&P Infinity Natural Resources Latest to File for IPO
2024-10-05 - Utica Shale E&P Infinity Natural Resources has not yet set a price or disclosed the number of shares it intends to offer.
Utica Oil E&P Infinity Natural Resources’ IPO Gains 7 More Bankers
2024-11-27 - Infinity Natural Resources’ IPO is expected to provide a first-look at the public market’s valuation of the Utica oil play.
Investor Returns Keep Aethon IPO-ready
2024-10-08 - Haynesville producer Aethon Energy is focused on investor returns, additional bolt-on acquisitions and mainly staying “IPO ready,” the company’s Senior Vice President of Finance said Oct. 3 at Hart Energy’s Energy Capital Conference (ECC) in Dallas.
Analyst: Is Jerry Jones Making a Run to Take Comstock Private?
2024-09-20 - After buying more than 13.4 million Comstock shares in August, analysts wonder if Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones might split the tackles and run downhill toward a go-private buyout of the Haynesville Shale gas producer.
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.