US midstream firm Energy Transfer said "several" of the long-term offtake contracts at its now-suspended 16.5mn t/yr Lake Charles LNG project have been terminated, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) today.
The company did not mention which contracts were canceled. The project sold 11.9mn t/yr, or 72pc of its nameplate capacity, under binding agreements between 2022 and late 2025, when Energy Transfer suspended development to double down on its spending on its natural gas pipeline network. Offtakers included Chevron, Shell, Gunvor, South Korea's SK Gas and Japanese utility Kyushu Electric Power.
Energy Transfer wrote in the SEC filing that it remains open to talks with third parties who may be interested in developing Lake Charles LNG, but that the company would not commit capital to the project. The firm would only be interested in supplying gas pipeline transportation capacity to the export terminal, according to the filing.
The terminated offtake agreements might lessen the appeal for third parties interested in taking over the project by adding more commercial hurdles to an eventual final investment decision. The site, in southwest Louisiana, is currently a mothballed regasification facility that Energy Transfer intended to repurpose for export operations.
Energy Transfer also is considering pivoting the site toward other commodities, whether it be a terminal for crude, natural gas liquids or refined products.

