NEWS

Cheniere Signs Train 6 EPC Deal

Image Courtesy: Cheniere

Image Courtesy: Cheniere

The long awaited Sabine Pass Train 6 has reached a major milestone after Cheniere confirms the EPC deal with Bechtel.

Jack Fusco, Cheniere’s CEO said, “We have finalized the Sabine Pass Train 6 EPC contract with Bechtel, and we are releasing Bechtel to commence early engineering, procurement, and construction activities for Train 6 ahead of making a final investment decision.”

Sabine Pass LNG started shipping the chilled fuel in early 2016, currently Trains 1 to 4 are operational and Train 5 is undergoing commissioning activities.

Corpus Christi LNG Plant Update

Image Courtesy: Cheniere

Image Courtesy: Cheniere

Another Cheniere project nearing completion and further advancing US LNG exports.

According to Cheniere’s CEO Jack Fusco, “Corpus Train 2 continues to progress on an accelerated schedule and we expect substantial completion in the second half of next year.”

Corpus Christi is a three train liquefaction project where each train is capable of producing 4.5 million tonnes of LNG per annum. Cheniere also owns and operates its Sabine Pass LNG export terminal.

S&P Global Platts: Contractors Express Caution On Bidding For New US LNG Export Projects

Facing unprecedented “pressure to sign engineering, procurement and construction deals for the lowest possible amount,” engineering, procurement, and construction firms (EPCs) are reported to vocalize their concerns.

From my perspective, the way we hear about dollars per ton this and dollars per ton that. The answer is not the lowest dollar per ton. The answer is we have collaborated and innovated to make sure we have the best possible cost, the best possible schedule and the best possible certainty of outcome.
-Bechtel President Aladair Cathcart

Forbes: Next Wave Of U.S. LNG Projects Lurks But Market Fistfight Is Inevitable

Weighing the United State’s LNG boon against an increasingly competitive global market, Forbes delivers a quiet warning - burgeoning production capacity does not guarantee the market’s success. The numerous pending American LNG plant projects awaiting environmental permits final investment decisions are far from secure:

The entry of the U.S. as a marginal producer has changed the game. But it’s easy to get caught up in the market euphoria and forget that U.S. exporters are not the only game in town. American exports are (and will be) toughing it out with Australian and Qatari exports. It’s extremely challenging to get long-term high volume offtake agreements to support the construction of these facilities.
— David Lang, law firm Baker McKenzie's Global Head of LNG