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Energy Transfer extends its Lake Charles LNG supply agreement with Chevron

Energy Transfer, a pipeline operator, announced on Wednesday that it would supply U.S. oil giant Chevron an additional 1,000,000 tonnes of liquefied gas per year (mtpa), from its Lake Charles LNG Export Facility.

After the 2 mtpa contract signed last year, the 20-year deal brings the total volume contracted for LNG by Chevron up to 3 mtpa.

After President Donald Trump, commercial activity in the LNG sector has increased in the U.S.

Lifting a moratorium

After taking office in January, the new administration will begin issuing LNG export permits.

The Lake Charles project is one of the first to be affected by the Biden administration's refusal to extend Energy Transfer's license for export to countries that do not have free trade agreements with the U.S.

The company is now

Close to getting the go ahead

Lake Charles Facility

Energy Transfer has said that it will provide the super-chilled natural gas to Chevron free-onboard. The purchase price will be made up of a fixed charge for liquefaction and a component for gas supply indexed to Henry Hub benchmark.

Energy Transfer must reach a final positive decision on the Lake Charles Project before signing this agreement.

When approaching banks to obtain loans for the development of production facilities, LNG developers often use sales and purchase contracts.

The Chevron deal builds on Energy Transfer’s efforts to secure long-term contracts at the Lake Charles facility.

In May, the pipeline operator signed a contract with Japan's Kyushu Electric Power to supply 1 mtpa LNG. It entered into a non-binding agreement in April with MidOcean Energy to supply 5 mtpa.

The shares of Energy Transfer and Chevron both rose slightly in premarket trading. Reporting by Vallari Shrivastava, Bengaluru. Editing by Shreya biswas

(source: Reuters)