Deepwater Port LNG Terminal

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This article is part of the Global Fossil Infrastructure Tracker, a project of Global Energy Monitor and the Center for Media and Democracy.
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Deepwater Port LNG Terminal, also called the Avocet FLNG Terminal, and formerly part of the now defunct Grand Chenier System, is a proposed LNG terminal in Baja, Mexico. There have been no development updates since 2016, and the project is presumed to be shelved.

Location

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Project Details

  • Owner: Avocet LNG, LLC
  • Parent: Fairwood Peninsula Energy
  • Location: Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Louisiana, USA
  • Coordinates: 28.692000, -90.812870 (approximate)
  • Capacity:
  • Status: Shelved
  • Type: Export
  • Start Year:

Note: mtpa = million tonnes per year; bcfd = billion cubic feet per day

Background

In February of 2016, TC Offshore LLC filed an application with FERC to abandon, by sale to Avocet LNG, LLC, its Grand Chenier System for use by Avocet as part of a proposed Deepwater Port LNG export project. According to the application, Avocet’s proposed project would involve a mooring system to be built in federal waters near the terminus points of the Grand Chenier System and floating liquefaction natural gas vessels (FLNGVs), located at the moorings. Avocet will reverse the natural gas flow to a southerly direction, towards the offshore mooring sites and the FLNGVs, where the gas would be liquefied, stored, and ultimately loaded onto carriers for export. Avocet is owned by Fairwood Peninsula Energy, which is also the parent company of Delfin LNG LLC, sponsor of a Deepwater Port LNG export project for offshore Louisiana.[1]

There have been no development updates since 2016, and the project is presumed to be shelved.

Articles and resources

References

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External resources

External articles

Costa Azul LNG Terminal, Wikipedia, accessed November 2017