Commonwealth LNG signs supply deals with five major buyers
The owners of the proposed Commonwealth LNG export facility in Louisiana announced supply deals with five major buyers as the company crossed a key threshold on its path to arranging the financing necessary for the $12.5 billion facility.
“These commitments from high-quality international partners are a testament to their confidence in the Commonwealth project and our ability to deliver a facility instrumental to their needs in serving the global energy market,” said David Lawler, CEO of Caturus, the Houston-based company behind Commonwealth. “Our LNG export capability will be a key component of Caturus’ wellhead to-water strategy in building the nation’s leading independent integrated natural gas company.”
LNG is the acronym for liquefied natural gas.
Commonwealth announced it has signed long-term sales agreements with Pittsburgh-based EQT LNG Trading, Malaysia’s Petronas LNG, Aramco Trading Americas, and Glencore and Mercuria Energy Trading, both of which are headquartered in Switzerland.
The finalization of these agreements effectively replaces capacity from a previous long-term deal with Japan’s JERA, which was terminated on March 3 without a reason disclosed.
According to Caturus, up to 2,000 workers will be employed during construction, and the facility will provide 300 permanent jobs in Cameron Parish once it becomes operational.
The plant will generate an estimated $3.5 billion in annual export revenue, according to Caturus, with operations expected to begin in 2030.
The company has sold enough of the plant’s planned 9.5 million-ton-per year of capacity to satisfy lenders and expects to make a final decision on the investment soon.
Latest News Stories
Illinois officials say Bears still may stay despite team’s Indiana statement
More than 60% of Minnesota high-risk Medicaid providers fail review
Senate sends $70B bill funding ICE, border patrol to vacant House
Chicago Bears to advance stadium project in Indiana
Greer, Carr commended for seeking fairness in EU treatment of US tech firms
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker pauses data center tax credits
U.S. adds 172k jobs in ‘strong’ May report, unemployment remains at 4.3%
Researchers put a number on how much debt U.S. can carry
Colorado governor vetoes legislation allowing ICE to be sued
Ballots processed slowly as Californians await 36-day count
WATCH: WA mayor stands by pro-ICE, anti-Antifa proclamations
U.S. House narrowly passes bill to fund USDA, FDA in 2027