Adds number of LNG export cargoes in third paragraph
ConocoPhillips restarted operations at its Kenai LNG export terminal this month and plans to resume exports in May, it said today.
Kenai exported five cargoes last year, all to the relatively nearby market of Japan. The cargoes departed the facility in May-October 2014 and were bought by utility Kansai Electric at delivered prices in the range of $14.97/mmBtu-$15.65/mmBtu, according to the US Department of Energy (DOE).
ConocoPhillips said it planned to sell five to six LNG cargoes to Japan this year from the Kenai facility.
The DOE last year authorised Kenai to export a combined volume equivalent to as much as 40Bcf (1.1bn m³) of gas for two years to any nation.
The cargoes that Kenai exported in 2014 totaled a gas equivalent of 13.3 Bcf, so Kenai could export up to a gas equivalent of 26.7 Bcf this year.
The small facility, which has capacity of 1.5mn t/yr, equivalent to 200mn cf/d of gas, opened in 1969 to serve Japan.
It was mothballed in March 2013 because of uncertainty over whether Alaska's Cook Inlet had enough gas to meet local and export demand. But in September 2013, Alaska's then Department of Natural Resources acting commissioner Joseph Balash asked ConocoPhillips to resume Kenai exports, to provide more markets for growing Cook Inlet gas production.
The Excel LNG tanker, which has capacity of 138,000m³, equivalent to 2.8 Bcf of gas, arrived at Kenai earlier this week, according to ship tracking data. The same vessel delivered all five of Kenai's exports last year to Japan.
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