Cheniere sees first LNG from third Corpus Christi train soon

US LNG exporter Cheniere expects to launch production at the third train from its Corpus Christi export plant in Texas in the coming weeks following the introduction of feed gas to the unit in October.

The Corpus Christi liquefaction plant currently consists of two operational trains with each having a capacity of about 5 million tonnes per annum. The third train will boost the total production to 15 mtpa.

Cheniere CEO Jack Fusco said during an earnings call on Friday that the third unit is about 97 percent complete.

“We expect first LNG production from Train 3 in the coming weeks. In fact, they’ll now predict substantial completion in the first quarter of 2021,” he said.

This means that the unit will be completed ahead of the schedule as Cheniere previously planned to complete the train in the second half of 2021.

Furthermore, construction is also progressing on the sixth 5 mtpa train at the firm’s Sabine Pass facility.

The 25 mtpa Sabine Pass plant has five operational trains and is currently the largest such facility in the US.

According to Fusco, Sabine Pass Train 6 is about 71 percent complete.

“In fact, they’ll continue to project substantial completion in the second half of 2022, having recently accelerated that timeframe,” he said.

Net loss grows

Cheniere reported a $463 million net loss in the third quarter of this year. This compares to a loss of $319 million in the same period last year.

Revenues also dropped from $2.17 billion last year to $1.46 billion logged in the July-September period this year.

Cheniere exported 55 LNG cargoes versus 108 shipments last year, down 49 percent year-on-year.

The lower number of cargoes is mostly related to customer cargo cancellations which also impacted the firm’s revenue.

Excluding the impact of out-of-period cargo cancellations, Cheniere’s third-quarter revenues of $1.46 billion would have been approximately $1.87 billion, the firm said.

- Advertisements -

Most Popular

QatarEnergy seals $6 billion deal with Chinese shipbuilder for 18 giant LNG carriers

State-owned LNG giant QatarEnergy has signed a major shipbuilding deal worth $6 billion with China State Shipbuilding Corp for...

NFE says ‘minor mechanical issue’ will not affect Altamira LNG launch

US LNG player New Fortress Energy said that "a minor technical issue" which took place last week on one...

TotalEnergies CEO: Mozambique LNG restart is not a matter of costs

French energy giant TotalEnergies had "good" discussions with Mozambique LNG contractors and they agreed not to inflate the costs...

More News Like This

Flex clinches another LNG carrier charter extension

Norwegian shipping firm Flex LNG, the owner of 13 liquefied natural gas carriers, has secured a time charter extension...

Cheniere’s Corpus Christi LNG expansion project almost 53 percent complete

The Stage 3 expansion project at Cheniere's Corpus Christi LNG export plant in Texas is almost 53 percent complete,...

Cheniere in $1.5 billion senior notes offering

US LNG exporting giant Cheniere has priced its $1.5 billion offering of senior notes due 2034. Cheniere said in a...

Dynagas welcomes new LNG tanker in its fleet

Greek LNG shipping firm Dynagas has taken delivery of the 200,000-cbm LNG carrier, Clean Vitality, in South Korea. The firm...