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Growth in global LNG export capacity will be limited in 2023

Published by , Editorial Assistant
Hydrocarbon Engineering,


In 2023, four new LNG export projects are expected to come online worldwide, with a combined capacity of 1.0 billion ft3/d, according to the EIA's estimates based on trade press and company press releases. The total annual LNG capacity additions will be the lowest since 2013, when 0.7 billion ft3/d of new export capacity was placed in service, according to the International Group of Liquefied Natural Gas Importers (GIIGNL). Between 2014 and 2022, annual LNG capacity additions ranged from a low of 1.8 billion ft3/d in 2021 to a high of 5.6 billion ft3/d in 2018.

New LNG export projects that are expected to come online in 2023 include:

  • The Greater Tortue Floating LNG (FLNG) production unit located offshore Mauritania and Senegal (0.3 billion ft3/d capacity).
  • The Tango Floating LNG production unit located offshore the Republic of Congo (0.1 billion ft3/d capacity). The Tango FLNG was previously used to produce LNG in Argentina in 2019 – 2020.
  • Tangguh LNG Train 3 in West Papua, Indonesia (0.5 billion ft3/d capacity), which will expand the existing project.
  • Sengkang LNG in South Sulawesi, Indonesia (0.1 billion ft3/d capacity). This project was designed to include four liquefaction trains, each with capacity of 66 million ft3/d. However, construction has started on only the first train, and the completion timeline of the project has been extended several times.

In 2022, three new LNG export projects with a combined capacity of 2.2 billion ft3/d came online in the US, Russia, and Mozambique. In the US, Calcasieu Pass LNG with a peak production capacity of 1.6 billion ft3/d started production from its 18 mid-scale liquefaction trains. In Russia, Portovaya LNG (0.2 billion ft3/d capacity) started production in the summer and loaded its first LNG cargo in September 2022. In Mozambique, Coral South Floating LNG production unit 1 (capacity 0.4 billion ft3/d) loaded its first cargo in November 2022.

In the last 11 years (2012 – 2022), Australia and the US led the growth in global LNG capacity by adding a combined 22.7 billion ft3/d of LNG export capacity that accounted for 75% of the total global capacity additions over this period.

Regionally, countries in Africa—Algeria, Angola, Cameroon, and Mozambique—built 2.7 billion ft3/d of new LNG export capacity over this period, while Russia added 2.6 billion ft3/d. Countries in the Asia Pacific region (excluding Australia) added a combined 2.4 billion ft3/d of LNG export capacity.

The US began exporting LNG in February 2016, and within seven years developed the world’s largest LNG export capacity, overtaking Australia and Qatar, with seven LNG export facilities totaling 13.9 billion ft3/d of peak production capacity.

In 2024 – 2025, the EIA expects fewer global LNG export capacity additions than in previous years. US LNG export capacity is expected to grow as three projects currently under construction are completed. One LNG export project in Russia — Arctic LNG 2 — which started construction in 2017, has been delayed and is now tentatively targeting 2023 – 2026 for bringing its three LNG trains online. New LNG export projects in Canada and Mexico are also expected to be placed into service by 2025 – 2026.

Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/gas-processing/03022023/growth-in-global-lng-export-capacity-will-be-limited-in-2023/

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