Chiyoda, CB&I reach deal with Golden Pass LNG for first train

Japan's Chiyoda and US-based CB&I have reached a deal with Golden Pass LNG, a joint venture owned by QatarEnergy and ExxonMobil, to complete the construction of the first liquefaction at the giant LNG export plant in Texas.

This story requires a subscription

Get 12 months of full digital access to LNG Prime for only $295 instead of $600.
This includes a single user license.
Check our FAQ for more info. For group subscriptions please contact us.

Most Popular

South Korea’s Samsung Heavy clinches another LNG carrier order

South Korean shipbuilding giant Samsung Heavy Industries has secured an order to build another liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier for approximately $252 million.

Glenfarne expects Alaska LNG project to cost up to $54.5 billion

US energy firm Glenfarne expects both phases of the Alaska LNG project to cost up to $54.5 billion.

Uniper pens preliminary Ksi Lisims LNG deal

German energy firm Uniper has signed a preliminary deal with Ksi Lisims LNG to buy LNG from the latter's planned export project in Canada.

More News Like This

Hudong-Zhonghua kicks off construction on first QC-Max LNG carrier

Chinese shipbuilder Hudong-Zhonghua has officially started building the first ultra-large QC-Max LNG carrier as part of the massive QatarEnergy shipbuilding program. The shipbuilder says this is the world's largest LNG carrier.

ExxonMobil appoints Mozambique head

US energy giant ExxonMobil has appointed Johanna Boothey as lead country manager and chairperson of its unit in Mozambique. ExxonMobil...

CB&I scores Commonwealth LNG tank gig

Texas-based CB&I has secured a contract from French engineering firm Technip Energies to build five liquefied natural gas storage tanks for Kimmeridge's $13 billion, 9.5 mtpa Commonwealth LNG export project near Cameron, Louisiana.

Edison says QatarEnergy extends force majeure until mid-August

Italian energy firm Edison, a unit of EDF, said it had received a new force majeure notification from state-owned LNG giant QatarEnergy, affecting supplies scheduled for delivery at the Adriatic LNG terminal in Italy.