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Gas streams to Louisiana Cameron LNG export plant cut ahead of typhoon, LSEG data shows

The amount of natural gas streaming to the Cameron LNG export plant in Louisiana dropped on Tuesday, just one day before Tropical Storm Francine was expected to strike the Louisiana coast near Cameron as a hurricane, information from financial firm LSEG showed.

Authorities at Cameron LNG were not immediately readily available for talk about the reason for the decrease.

LSEG said the quantity of gas flowing to Cameron fell from about 2.2 billion cubic feet daily (bcfd) on Monday to 1.3 bcfd on Tuesday. That compares with approximately 2.1 bcfd over the previous week.

One billion cubic feet of gas suffices to provide about 5 million homes for a day.

The U.S. National Typhoon Center (NHC) forecasted Francine will enhance into a cyclone on Tuesday before hitting the Louisiana coast on Wednesday. Louisiana is home to three of the nation's seven huge LNG export plants, including Cameron.

With over 75% of U.S. gas production originating from huge inland shale basins like Appalachia in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio and the Permian in West Texas and eastern Brand-new Mexico, analysts stated typhoons were more likely to minimize gas costs by cutting demand through power blackouts and knocking LNG export plants out of service.

That is various from twenty years ago when 20% of the country's. gas came from the federal offshore Gulf of Mexico. Back then,. Gulf Coast hurricanes generally triggered gas prices to surge, but. now that offshore area produces just about 2% of the country's. gas.

(source: Reuters)