America’s first shale gas export terminal starts production

Business Friday 01/January/2016 18:34 PM
By: Times News Service
America’s first shale gas export terminal starts production

New York: Cheniere Energy began production at what will become the first terminal to export natural gas from America’s shale formations, according to ING Capital, which helped finance the project.
The company is receiving about 50 million cubic feet of the fuel a day, chilling it into liquefied natural gas (LNG) at the Sabine Pass terminal in Louisiana, and storing it in tanks before the first export, Richard Ennis, head of natural resources at ING, said by e-mail on Wednesday.
Ennis said he receives regular updates from the company and that he hadn’t been informed of a delay in the startup. Cheniere spokeswoman Faith Parker didn’t immediately respond to telephone and e-mailed requests for comment on Wednesday.
Cheniere has previously said the inaugural cargo will leave the complex in January by tanker and that UK-based BG Group is contracted to take the first shipment. Sabine Pass is “on schedule,” Ennis said. “You can’t dock a ship to offtake the LNG until you have a full shipload of LNG in the tanks, which is planned to happen in January.”
The start at Sabine Pass paves the way for other planned liquefied natural gas terminals that are projected to turn the United States into one of the world’s largest suppliers. The country may be capable of exporting 7.76 billion cubic feet of gas a day by 2019, a Bloomberg New Energy Finance analysis shows. While the US has been sending gas abroad from Alaska for years, Cheniere’s cargo would mark the first to leave from the lower-48 states, a testament to surging shale supplies that have sent domestic stockpiles to record levels.
Shale boom
Cheniere’s export terminal underscores how dramatically the shale boom has reshaped the natural gas market. Before drillers started pulling the fuel out of tight-rock formations using hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, Cheniere was building import terminals in anticipation of a domestic shortage. Following the onslaught of shale gas, Cheniere started retrofitting terminals for exports.
Natural gas futures have plunged more than 80 per cent from 2008 highs to a 16-year low earlier this month on the New York Mercantile Exchange. February contracts rose 5.6 per cent to settle at $2.337 per million British thermal units on Thursday.
The US cargoes will mark “a paradigm shift for the industry,” Hadi Hallouche, head of liquefied natural gas trading at Trafigura Beheer BV, said by phone from Geneva.
Pipeline nominations
The supply of natural gas scheduled to arrive at Cheniere’s Sabine Pass terminal from two pipelines for liquefaction surged to 128,987 dekatherms on Wednesday from just 6,720 a month ago.
Sabine Pass still needs authorization from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s director of energy projects “to initiate commercial service” of its first liquefaction plant, Tamara Young-Allen, a spokeswoman at the Washington-based agency, said in an e-mail on Thursday.
“Commissioning and testing activities will initially produce minimal quantities of liquefied gas and is expected to increase in quantity during start-up activities, which are required to bring the train online to verify performance and functionality,” she said.
Cheniere has had a rocky year, dealing with a slide in US natural gas prices, the ouster of its co-founder and chief executive officer, Charif Souki, and scrutiny from billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn. While the company’s stock gained almost a dollar on Thursday, it has fallen 47 per cent this year.
With gas demand in parts of Asia weakening, US suppliers are turning their attention to Europe as their primary market. BG Group spokeswoman Kim Blomley referred a request for comment on the startup to Cheniere on Wednesday.
Plants such as Sabine Pass will cool and liquefy natural gas to 1/600th of its volume for easier loading onto tankers. Cheniere plans to build at least six “trains” that produce LNG at Sabine Pass by late 2018, allowing the terminal to supply more than 3.5 billion cubic feet a day. The project is estimated to cost at least $15 billion.