UNEX A major natural gas terminal in Texas goes offline because of an explosion

Zagdid

Veteran Member

A major natural gas terminal in Texas goes offline because of an explosion
June 10, 20227:57 AM ET
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — An explosion at a liquefied natural gas terminal in Texas has left nearby residents rattled and is taking a substantial amount of the fuel off the market at a time when global demand is soaring.

Freeport LNG will be offline for at least three weeks, the company said Thursday, following a fire in its export facility. The company said no one was injured, and the cause is under investigation.

Melanie Oldham, who lives in Freeport, said she heard three loud bangs Wednesday morning and went outside to find out what was going on.

"It makes me feel like we are daily living with high risk of explosion, release of gas, public health issues for not only us in Freeport, but for all the people who go to those big beaches on Quintana Island," said Oldham, a physical therapist and co-founder of Citizens for Clean Air and Clean Water of Freeport and Brazoria County. "We don't know what could have been released into the air or even the water."

A fire in the LNG terminal's liquefaction delivery system led to excess emissions of carbon monoxide, nitrous oxides, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide and volatile organic compounds, according to an incident report filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality Thursday.

Longtime Freeport resident Gwendolyn Jones, 63, said she was about a mile or two from the facility when she saw a white cloud hovering over it after the fire. She was concerned that Freeport residents weren't evacuated or warned about the incident by local authorities and thought nearby residents should be given respirators to help reduce the risk of inhaling dangerous fumes.

"We should have meetings where we could discuss issues to make sure that this would never ever happen again, because I'm afraid of what's going to happen next," Jones said. "Nothing but the grace of God has kept us alive in these situations."

Normally, Freeport LNG exports about 2 billion cubic feet of liquefied natural gas per day, about 15% of the nation's LNG exports.
The shutdown comes at a time when global demand for LNG is high because many nations are trying to wean themselves off Russian gas, which is sent into Europe primarily though pipelines. U.S. exports have been soaring.

Most of Freeport LNG's exports were going to Europe, according to Rystad Energy. Europe may be able to offset the lost volume with increases from other facilities, said Emily McClain, vice president at Rystad. Europe gets about 45% of its LNG from the U.S., and the rest comes from Russia, Qatar and other sources, she said.

Freeport LNG sells gas to a mix of buyers including major oil and gas companies, Asian utilities and commodities traders, and "those buyers will no longer be getting deliveries from Freeport until the facility is fixed," said Ross Wyeno, lead analyst at S&P Global Commodity Insights. Wyeno said it's unlikely that other LNG terminals around the world can increase production to pick up the slack because "everybody's pretty much maxed out if they can be."

As a result, LNG prices are increasing, and consumers in Europe are likely to feel the impact, Wyeno said. But in the U.S., natural gas prices are falling because a major buyer of gas — the LNG terminal — stopped buying, he added.

Lower domestic natural gas prices aren't soothing the nerves of people who live near the terminal though. Freeport residents such as Oldham and Jones have long been concerned about the potential for incidents at the terminal.

"Our fears came true, unfortunately," Oldham said.
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
"Our fears came true, unfortunately," Oldham said.

Just why then did you buy a home near a terminal?

Texican....
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
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Zagdid

Veteran Member
So its an export terminal, Its an advantage if they can't export it.

Australia might agree presently:

The world’s top liquified natural gas exporter is facing a gas shortage

By Mary Hui Reporter
Published June 7, 2022

Australia is the world’s top exporter of liquified natural gas (LNG). Right now, it is also facing a domestic gas crisis.
Prices of power and gas in the land down under have surged amid what the country’s energy minister has called a “perfect storm” of factors.

Those factors include a cold snap that has driven up heating demand, outages at coal-fired power plants, and a tight global LNG market as European countries scramble to cut their reliance on Russian gas. That has left Australia in the lurch as spare regasification units—vessels that store LNG and turn it back to natural gas when needed—have been snapped up by European customers. Natural gas accounts for 22% of Australia’s primary energy consumption.

The gas shortage means many consumers have to pay more to keep their lights on and their homes heated; energy-intensive businesses could find themselves in perilous financial situations, potentially putting jobs at risk. For the newly elected government headed by prime minister Anthony Albanese, the energy crunch also represents its first major test.

“A gas crisis…15 years in the making.”
It might seem counterintuitive that the world’s top LNG exporter would face a gas shortage at home.

In part, this is due to geographic reasons: Major cities including Sydney and Melbourne in the southeast are far away from the country’s main gas fields.

Of course, the global energy crisis unleashed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is to blame, too.

But policy decisions taken by the Australian government also laid the foundation of what Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s business editor Ian Verrender calls “a gas crisis that has been 15 years in the making.”

First, he argues, there has been “a critical shortage of investment in energy generation.” And second, Australia has allowed large global energy companies to export much of the country’s gas.

Indeed, while the state of Western Australia mandates that gas export development projects must reserve 15% for the domestic market, state governments in the east did not put in place such a requirement, and ” gave local and multinational energy firms carte blanche to export as much as they’d like,” writes Verrender. The result is that nearly 75% of Australia’s gas production is exported.

So what’s to be done?

Already, Australia’s energy market operator has capped wholesale gas prices in southern states. It also for the first time triggered a mechanism to call on more gas supplies for power generators.

But those measures leave unaddressed what analysts say is a more fundamental problem: the high proportion of natural gas exports relative to production.

Gas analyst Bruce Robertson of the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis argues that eastern states in Australia should have a gas reservation policy like their Western Australia counterparts. As Robertson told the Canberra Times, a domestic gas reservation policy in other states can protect consumers from “ridiculous prices.”
Or as research from the Australian Institute’s Climate and Energy program puts it, “Australia doesn’t have a gas supply problem. [It] has a gas export problem.”
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic

A major natural gas terminal in Texas goes offline because of an explosion
June 10, 20227:57 AM ET
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — An explosion at a liquefied natural gas terminal in Texas has left nearby residents rattled and is taking a substantial amount of the fuel off the market at a time when global demand is soaring.

Freeport LNG will be offline for at least three weeks, the company said Thursday, following a fire in its export facility. The company said no one was injured, and the cause is under investigation.

Melanie Oldham, who lives in Freeport, said she heard three loud bangs Wednesday morning and went outside to find out what was going on.

"It makes me feel like we are daily living with high risk of explosion, release of gas, public health issues for not only us in Freeport, but for all the people who go to those big beaches on Quintana Island," said Oldham, a physical therapist and co-founder of Citizens for Clean Air and Clean Water of Freeport and Brazoria County. "We don't know what could have been released into the air or even the water."

A fire in the LNG terminal's liquefaction delivery system led to excess emissions of carbon monoxide, nitrous oxides, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide and volatile organic compounds, according to an incident report filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality Thursday.

Longtime Freeport resident Gwendolyn Jones, 63, said she was about a mile or two from the facility when she saw a white cloud hovering over it after the fire. She was concerned that Freeport residents weren't evacuated or warned about the incident by local authorities and thought nearby residents should be given respirators to help reduce the risk of inhaling dangerous fumes.

"We should have meetings where we could discuss issues to make sure that this would never ever happen again, because I'm afraid of what's going to happen next," Jones said. "Nothing but the grace of God has kept us alive in these situations."

Normally, Freeport LNG exports about 2 billion cubic feet of liquefied natural gas per day, about 15% of the nation's LNG exports.
The shutdown comes at a time when global demand for LNG is high because many nations are trying to wean themselves off Russian gas, which is sent into Europe primarily though pipelines. U.S. exports have been soaring.

Most of Freeport LNG's exports were going to Europe, according to Rystad Energy. Europe may be able to offset the lost volume with increases from other facilities, said Emily McClain, vice president at Rystad. Europe gets about 45% of its LNG from the U.S., and the rest comes from Russia, Qatar and other sources, she said.

Freeport LNG sells gas to a mix of buyers including major oil and gas companies, Asian utilities and commodities traders, and "those buyers will no longer be getting deliveries from Freeport until the facility is fixed," said Ross Wyeno, lead analyst at S&P Global Commodity Insights. Wyeno said it's unlikely that other LNG terminals around the world can increase production to pick up the slack because "everybody's pretty much maxed out if they can be."

As a result, LNG prices are increasing, and consumers in Europe are likely to feel the impact, Wyeno said. But in the U.S., natural gas prices are falling because a major buyer of gas — the LNG terminal — stopped buying, he added.

Lower domestic natural gas prices aren't soothing the nerves of people who live near the terminal though. Freeport residents such as Oldham and Jones have long been concerned about the potential for incidents at the terminal.

"Our fears came true, unfortunately," Oldham said.
Most of Freeport LNG's exports were going to Europe, according to Rystad Energy

Was this the work of sabotage!
 

GammaRat

Veteran Member
Zerohedge had this headline a couple of days ago, and indicated that because it's an "Export Terminal", this will cause a gut in supply in the US.

It would drive prices down locally.
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

Natural gas prices fall on news that a Texas terminal will be blocked for months.
Prices in the United States plunged 17 percent after officials said damage at the Freeport LNG terminal would take months to repair.

By Clifford Krauss June 14, 2022, 11:28 a.m. ET

Natural gas prices in the United States plummeted 17 percent on Tuesday after an announcement that fire damage at a Texas gas export terminal would take several more months to repair, blocking large export volumes.

Because Europe has grown increasingly dependent on American liquefied natural gas to replace Russian production, the news sent European natural gas prices higher. Europe’s prices are set regionally, not globally like oil.

When an explosion damaged part of the Freeport LNG terminal on June 8, officials said it would probably take three weeks to return the plant to normal functions. Gas prices, which had more than doubled since last year, dropped modestly.

But on Tuesday, the company announced that hopes for a partial restart in 90 days were not feasible.

“At this time, completion of all necessary repairs and a return to full plant operations is not expected until late 2022,” the company said in a statement.

The plant is responsible for nearly 14 percent of American exports of liquefied natural gas, which is gas supercooled so it can be shipped in tankers.

The temporary closing will add natural gas supplies to the domestic market, bringing some relief to electricity customers.
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member
I had eyes on this plant last week.

Very quiet, didn't see much that indicated major repairs.
One article that I saw recently mentioned 'the F word' referring the Freeport. Seems it's status dictates pricing and futures. I have come to believe that its misfortune was not accidental and might have been the work of higher level parties trying to ensure both domestic supply and price regulation. God bless them.
 
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