QatarEnergy selects Shell as partner for $28.75 billion LNG expansion project

LNG giant Shell is the latest international firm to join QatarEnergy’s huge LNG expansion project, which will boost Qatar’s LNG export capacity by 32 million tons per annum.

Shell is the fifth partner to join the $28.75 billion North Field East (NFE) expansion project after France’s TotalEnergiesItaly’s Eni, and US firms ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil.

The company said on Tuesday it would hold a 25 percent share in a joint venture company which would own 25 percent of the North Field East expansion project, including the four mega LNG trains with a capacity of 32 Mtpa.

This means that Shell will have a 6.25 percent stake in the project, such as ExxonMobil and TotalEnergies, while Eni and ConocoPhillips will hold 3.12 percent each.

Shell said its investment in this LNG expansion would support delivery of much-needed supplies of natural gas to markets around the world.

The project will also feature carbon capture and sequestration to reduce emissions.

Landmark project

“I am honoured that Shell has been selected by QatarEnergy. Through its pioneering integration with carbon capture and storage, this landmark project will help provide LNG the world urgently needs with a lower carbon footprint,” Shell CEO, Ben van Beurden, said.

“This agreement deepens our strategic partnership with QatarEnergy which includes multiple international partnerships such as the world-class Pearl GTL asset,” he said.

In February last year, QatarEnergy took a final investment decision on the NFE project to boost Qatar’s annual LNG capacity from 77 million tons to 110 million tons.

The state-owned firm is developing a second phase to further boost capacity to 126 Mtpa by 2027 as well as additional expansions.

QatarEnergy and its unit Qatargas are also working on a giant fleet of LNG carriers to support this expansion and the firms already completed the first contracts in China and South Korea, with more to come.

QatarEnergy selects Shell as partner for $28.75 billion LNG expansion project
Image: QatarEnergy

Partner selection concluded

QatarEnergy said in a separate statement that the firm has now concluded partner selection for its NFE expansion project.

“We value our long and fruitful relations and strategic partnership with Shell, not just within the State of Qatar, but in many other locations around the world,” Qatar’s energy minister and chief executive of QatarEnergy, Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi, said in the statement.

“And, as one of the largest players in the LNG business, they have a lot to bring to help meet global energy demand and security,” he said.

(Article updated with a statement by QatarEnergy.)

Most Popular

Atlantic LNG shipping rates down, Pacific rates climb

Atlantic spot LNG shipping rates dropped this week, while Pacific rates rose compared to the week before, according to Spark Commodities.

Cheniere nears launch of seventh Corpus Christi expansion train

US LNG exporter Cheniere is close to launching the seventh and final train of the Corpus Christi Stage 3 expansion project in Texas.

Vietnam’s Cai Mep LNG terminal starts gas deliveries to Phu My power complex

Nebula Energy’s AG&P LNG has started delivering natural gas from Vietnam's Cai Mep liquefied natural gas (LNG) import terminal to the 900 MW Phu My 2.1 and 2.1E power plants operated by EVNGENCO3.
spot_img

More News Like This

Singapore’s FueLNG in 800th STS bunkering operation

Singapore’s LNG bunkering player FueLNG, a joint venture of Shell and Seatrium, has completed its 800th ship-to-ship (STS) LNG bunkering operation.

LNG Canada offers option to First Nations to invest in Phase 2 storage tank

Shell-led LNG Canada has signed an agreement with five northwestern B.C. First Nations, giving them the option to invest up to C$1 billion ($711 million) to acquire an LNG storage tank slated for construction as part of the expansion of its Kitimat LNG export facility on the west coast of Canada.

ARC Resources shareholders approve $16.4 billion acquisition by Shell

Canadian gas producer ARC Resources said that its shareholders have approved the previously announced acquisition by UK-based LNG giant Shell, valued at approximately $16.4 billion, including debt.

Report: no LNG carriers passed through Hormuz since July 11

No LNG carriers have transited the Strait of Hormuz since July 11, as the security situation around the strategic waterway continues to deteriorate following Iranian attacks on three commercial vessels and subsequent military exchanges between Iran and the United States, according to Kpler data.