EIA: LNG sale and purchase agreements signed in 2023 support US LNG projects
Published by Poppy Clements,
Assistant Editor
Hydrocarbon Engineering,
The final investment decisions (FID) for these projects came before the DOE paused review of LNG export permits to countries with which the US does not have a free trade agreement. All the projects that reached FID in 2023 already had export approvals from DOE.
Venture Global began construction of Phase 2 of the Plaquemines export facility in Louisiana. In Texas, Sempra began construction on the first phase of its Port Arthur project, and NextDecade began construction of the first phase of the Rio Grande project. The in-service date of these projects under construction ranges from third-quarter 2024 to 2027.
Also included in the nine projects that signed SPAs in 2023 are three proposed projects and two projects that have received their respective regulatory approvals. Even though the approved projects, which would add approximately 3.8 billion ft3/d of US LNG export capacity, have export approvals from DOE, they are still under consideration by the companies and have not yet reached FID.
The terms in the SPAs signed last year were typical of many long-term US LNG export agreements. About three-quarters of the volumes in the 2023 SPAs had a contract duration of 20 years, beginning when the project starts commercial operations; the earliest start date would be the third quarter of 2024. Moreover, about 94% of the volumes in the SPAs were sold on a free-on-board (FOB) basis, which means the buyer takes ownership of the LNG at the loading terminal and pays for the product at that delivery point. More than one-half of the 2023 SPAs are indexed to the US benchmark Henry Hub natural gas price compared with about two-thirds of the SPAs signed in 2022. The volumes in the remaining 2023 SPAs would be using a different pricing mechanism, such as indexing to an oil benchmark price or another natural gas benchmark price.
The LNG volumes contracted in 2023 are relatively evenly split between offtake companies based in Europe and those based in Asia, indicating the likely destination for those cargoes. However, destination flexibility is a common feature of most of the SPAs, where the buyer can deliver LNG to any destination as long as it complies with DOE export authorisations and US law.
Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/gas-processing/07022024/eia-lng-sale-and-purchase-agreements-signed-in-2023-support-us-lng-projects/
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