Enable Midstream Partners LP has been granted approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to construct and operate the Gulf Run Pipeline project under section 7(c) of the Natural Gas Act, the company said on June 2.
The project is designed to transport natural gas from some of the most prolific natural gas producing regions in the U.S., including the Haynesville, Marcellus, Utica and Barnett shales and the Mid-Continent region, to the U.S. Gulf Coast and is backed by a 20-year commitment for 1.1 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) from cornerstone shipper Golden Pass LNG. The planned 42-inch pipeline provides for approximately 1.7 Bcf/d of capacity, allowing for upside potential beyond Golden Pass LNG’s commitment.
“We appreciate FERC’s thoughtful review of the project and all of the hard work from our best-in-class project team to reach this important milestone,” Rod Sailor, Enable president and CEO, said. “Gulf Run makes significant use of existing assets, reducing the project’s cost and environmental impact. With FERC approval and the demand for LNG increasing globally, the project is well-positioned to add new customer commitments.”
The cost for the project is currently estimated at approximately $540 million, and pipe for the project was recently acquired at favorable pricing relative to market. The contractor bidding process is underway, and the project is anticipated to be placed into service in late 2022.
Enable owns, operates and develops strategically located natural gas and crude oil infrastructure assets. Enable’s assets include approximately 14,000 miles of natural gas, crude oil, condensate and produced water gathering pipelines, approximately 2.6 Bcf/d of natural gas processing capacity, approximately 7,800 miles of interstate pipelines (including Southeast Supply Header, LLC of which Enable owns 50%), approximately 2,200 miles of intrastate pipelines and seven natural gas storage facilities comprising 84.5 billion cubic feet of storage capacity.
Recommended Reading
From Tokyo Gas to Chesapeake: The Slow-burning Fuse that Lit Haynesville M&A
2024-03-01 - TG Natural Resources rides the LNG wave with Rockcliff deal amid shale consolidation boom.
Exclusive: Is TG Natural Resources Looking to Snap Up More?
2024-03-27 - At Hart Energy's DUG Gas+ Conference and Expo in Shreveport, Louisiana, TG Natural Resources' President and CEO Craig Jarchow said the integration of the Rockcliff Energy acquisition is well underway and that "being acquisitive is certainly" in the company's future.
An Untapped Haynesville Block: Chevron Asset Attracts High Interest
2024-04-03 - Chevron’s 72,000-net-acre property in Panola County, Texas is lightly developed for the underlying Haynesville formation — and the supermajor may cut it loose.
Exclusive: Frank Tsuru Reflects on Indigo's History, Impact in the Haynesville
2024-04-11 - Frank Tsuru, president and CEO of Momentum Midstream and former CEO of Indigo Natural Resources, looks back at the early stages of Haynesville development and the Indigo-Southwestern deal, in this Hart Energy Exclusive interview.
Aethon Cuts Rigs but Wants More Western Haynesville Acreage
2024-03-31 - Private gas E&P Aethon Energy has drilled some screamers in its far western Haynesville Shale play—and the company wants to do more in the area.