Cheniere signs $4.69 billion deal with Bechtel to expand LNG export capacity

(Reuters) – Cheniere Energy Partners said on Thursday it signed a contract with Bechtel Corp for engineering, ​procurement and construction of the first phase of its Sabine Pass ‌LNG expansion project in Cameron Parish, Louisiana.

Here are more details:

  • The Sabine Pass LNG terminal has natural gas liquefaction facilities with a total production capacity of over 30 ​million tonnes per annum of LNG in operation.
  • The contract is valued ​at $4.69 billion, according to a filing on Thursday with the ⁠U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  • The terminal allows the U.S. to export its ​abundant shale gas, sourced from the Permian and Haynesville basins, bolstering the ​U.S. trade balance and providing geopolitical allies with an alternative to Russian or Middle Eastern gas.
  • The first phase of the project includes Train 7, a boil-off gas re-liquefaction unit ​and related infrastructure tied to the existing Sabine Pass LNG terminal. ​Phase 1’s expected total production capacity is over 6 mtpa.
  • The company expects to reach a ‌final ⁠investment decision on the first phase by early 2027.
  • The planned expansion is part of the next phase of U.S. energy infrastructure growth and the continuation of a partnership between Bechtel and Cheniere that has helped reshape ​global energy markets, said ​Paul Marsden, ⁠president of Bechtel’s energy global business unit.
  • Cheniere also said it had issued Bechtel a limited notice to proceed, allowing ​early engineering and procurement work to begin.
  • Cheniere has to ​issue the ⁠full notice to proceed to Bechtel on or before May 21, 2028, or either party may terminate the contract, and Bechtel would be paid termination ⁠costs, ​according to the SEC filing.
  • LNG will play an ​essential role in the energy mix for decades to come, Marsden said.

Reporting by Dharna Bafna ​in Bengaluru and Curtis Williams in Houston; Editing by Diti Pujara, Rod Nickel