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EIA: NGL liquids exports reached record highs in 2025

Published by , Editorial Assistant
Hydrocarbon Engineering,


Natural gas liquids (NGL) exports reached 3.1 million bpd in 2025, growing 7% from the previous year. These fuels are primarily extracted from the natural gas stream. NGL plant production has increased every year since 2005, driven by higher production of NGLs and more global demand for NGLs, especially as petrochemical feedstocks.

Producers have increasingly targeted liquids-rich supply basins in recent years. Higher production of NGLs has led to lower prices in the United States relative to global benchmarks in East Asia and the Middle East, increasing global demand for U.S. NGLs, particularly ethane, propane, and butane.

NGL exports grew by 212,000 b/d last year with a 70,000 b/d (101%) increase in exports to India. Most NGLs are waterborne exports. In 2025, the top five destination countries for exports of U.S. NGLs were China, Japan, Canada, Mexico, and South Korea.

Ethane exports grew by 92 000 bpd (19%) in 2025, mostly from demand created by two newly completed projects: the Coatzacoalcos ethane cracker expansion project completed in May 2025 in Mexico and a new Yantai 2 ethane cracker in China completed around March 2025. Ethane is used primarily in petrochemical production of plastics by cracking ethane into ethylene, a base feedstock for petrochemicals. The US is one of the only countries capable of exporting waterborne ethane, apart from Norway, which exports small amounts around Northwest Europe.

In 2025, the US exported a total of 579 000 bpd of ethane to nine countries. A little more than 50% of US ethane exports went to China, with the second-highest volume going to Canada by pipeline and the third-highest volume going to India by tanker. The EIA expects US ethane exports to grow in 2026 with the completion of the INEOS Project One cracker in Antwerp, Belgium, which is slated to come online in 3Q26 with a capacity of about 80 000 bpd of ethane. This cracker will be the largest in Europe and one of the largest in the world.

US propane exports averaged a record 1.8 million bpd in 2025, the most since the EIA began collecting this data in 1973. US propane exports rose just 3% compared with the previous year. Propane is consumed globally for space heating, and it’s increasingly used as a petrochemical feedstock, especially in Asia, among other uses. Three of the top five destinations for US propane exports are in Asia, including China, Japan, and Korea.

Despite the overall increase, the top three importing countries from Asia of US propane decreased or had no change year over year. US exports to South Korea decreased 20% and volumes to Japan remained unchanged compared with the previous year. The largest importer of US propane in the world, China, reduced US propane receipts by 29% because of reciprocal tariffs on imported propane from the US at the end of the year. Decreases in US propane exports to those countries were more than offset by increases in exports to other Asian countries, especially India, which increased from 2000 bpd in 2024 to 41 000 bpd in 2025. Exports to other countries in Asia such as Vietnam, Singapore, and Indonesia increased by a combined 70 000 bpd. Increases in Europe, Latin America, and Africa also contributed to the cumulative increase in US propane exports.

US normal butane exports have increased every year since 2006, reaching a record-high average of nearly 535 000 bpd in 2025, a 9% increase from the previous year. Butane is used as a cooking fuel, a petrochemical feedstock, and a gasoline blendstock during the winter. Butane can also be converted to isobutane through isomerisation, producing high-octane gasoline components. The US exports a small amount of isobutane. Generally, butane demand has grown along with petrochemical demand. However, in many developing markets, governments have subsidised butane as a cleaner-burning replacement for other fuels (for example, wood, or charcoal) for uses such as cooking or heating.

US butane exports increased despite a 6% drop in exports to Morocco, the largest importer of US butane at 65 000 bpd in 2025. Indonesia, the second-largest destination for US butane increased by 11 000 bpd (22%). There was a significant rise in US exports to India, which increased to 36 000 bpd in 2025, a 34 000 bpd increase from the previous year. The major other countries that import US butane were Japan, South Korea, and Egypt. Although natural gasoline exports rose to 176 000 bpd (22%) in 2025, exports have been relatively stable after growing from 2007 through 2016, when they peaked at 202 000 bpd. Nearly all natural gasoline exports go to Canada by land, with insignificant amounts going to Mexico and Brazil.

Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/gas-processing/31032026/eia-ngl-liquids-exports-reached-record-highs-in-2025/

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