A move that would make gas import from the US to India a reality, GAIL (India) has booked capacity in the Cove Point LNG liquefaction terminal project, at Lusby, Maryland.
In a statement issued here, the company said that it has signed a terminal service agreement with Dominion for booking 2.3 mmtpa liquefaction capacity in the liquefaction terminal project.
GAIL has struck the agreement through GAIL Global (USA) LNG LLC. Dominion, which is a Fortune 500 company, is one of the largest producers and transporter of energy in the US with a portfolio of approximately 27,500 megawatts of generation, 11,000 miles of natural gas transmission, gathering and storage pipeline and 6,300 miles of electric transmission lines.
Under this agreement, GAIL will procure its own natural gas and deliver it to the Cove Point pipeline for liquefaction at the terminal and loading into ships brought to the facility on the Chesapeake Bay.
Dominion would be setting up the liquefaction facilities in the premises of its existing 11.7 mmtpa re-gasification terminal. Construction work is expected to start in 2014 so as to put the liquefaction facilities into service in 2017.
Dominion is marketing 4.6 mmtpa and GAIL has booked 50 per cent of such capacity for 20 years. A major Japanese buyer holds the balance capacity in the terminal. Cove Point will be a premier facility in terms of direct access to the Marcellus and Utica shale plays, two of the most prolific shale gas basins in North America.
During an interactive video session following the signing of the document, B C Tripathi, Chairman and Managing Director of GAIL said “GAIL has a positive outlook on Henry Hub indexed LNG exports from the US and that has prompted us to sign this terminal service agreement which follows our deal with Cheniere signed in 2011.
The contracts signed with Cheniere and Dominion make GAIL one of the largest Henry Hub LNG portfolio holders and provide us an opportunity to market about 6.0 mmtpa of LNG from the US.”
“Our upstream acquisition efforts for gas sourcing and hedging would now intensify in US. This deal would also provide GAIL with an opportunity to trade part of the volume in the international market apart from organizing the ships required to transport rest of the volume to India,” Tripathi said.
On the occasion, Thomas F. Farrell II, Chairman, President and CEO of Dominion said “Japan and India are important allies and trading partners of the United States that are in need of secure sources of natural gas, and Sumitomo and GAIL are high-quality companies working to meet those needs. We believe the agreements we have signed serve very important economic goals for all three nations.”
In concluding this transaction, GAIL was assisted by Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld on legal matters and by Ernst & Young on financial and tax matters while Poten & Partners was the commercial consultant engaged by GAIL.