G2 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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G2 LNG Terminal is a proposed LNG export terminal in Cameron Parish, Louisiana, United States. There have been no development updates in over two years, and the project is presumed to be shelved.

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Project Details

  • Owner:
  • Parent: G2 LNG LLC
  • Location: Cameron Parish, Louisiana, United States
  • Coordinates: 29.85, -93.2 (approximate)
  • Capacity: 14.1036 mtpa, 2.02 bcfd
  • Status: Shelved
  • Type: Export
  • Start Year: Expected 2021

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

Background

G2 LNG Terminal is a proposed LNG export terminal in Louisiana, United States.[1] G2 filed a Free Trade Agreement / non-Free Trade Agreement license to export application with US Department of Energy in March of 2015, and was granted the Free Trade Agreement export license in July of 2015. The formal application to the Federal Energy and Regulatory Commission (FERC) was filed in the 2nd quarter of 2016. A decision on the non- Free Trade Agreement export license is pending. The $11 billion project, if constructed, would be located on the Calcasieu River Ship Channel in Cameron Parish, Louisiana; G2 says the terminal would potentially service customers in Asia, Europe, India, and the Caribbean. [2] The G2 LNG Chairman, Charles Roemer, is a former Louisiana governor.

There have been no development updates in over two years, and the project is presumed to be shelved.

Articles and resources

References

  1. G2 Liquefied Natural Gas, Project Development, accessed May 2017
  2. G2 Says Louisiana LNG Terminal Could Be Online in 2020, Joe Fisher, Natural Gas Intelligence, 5 October 2015

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