NextDecade Corp. has secured debt financing to support the build-out of the company’s $18.4 billion Rio Grande LNG project in South Texas., according to a Sept. 20 news release.
Houston-based NextDecade Corp. entered into a credit agreement with a group of lenders for $356 million in senior loans to finance a portion of the first three liquefaction trains at Rio Grande LNG.
The disbursement of the senior loans enabled NextDecade to reduce commitments under Rio Grande LNG’s existing term loan facilities for the project’s first phase to less than $10.8 billion from $11.1 billion, the company said.
“This financing transaction aligns with NextDecade’s long-term balance sheet strategy for Phase 1, which includes extending and staggering debt maturities, diversifying sources of capital, reducing bank capital over time to provide potential capacity for financing future LNG expansions, and mitigating interest rate exposure,” the company said.
NextDecade announced a final investment decision (FID) to go forward with developing Phase 1 of Rio Grande LNG in July. The first phase calls for three liquefaction trains with a nameplate capacity of 17.6 million tonnes per annum (mtpa).
A second phase of construction planned at Rio Grande LNG—being developed in Brownsville, Texas—could eventually add two more trains, boosting the export facility’s capacity up to 27 mtpa.
NextDecade’s LNG FID was the third in the U.S. this year. The others are the second phase of Venture Global’s Plaquemines LNG project in Louisiana and Phase 1 of Sempra’s Port Arthur LNG project.
RELATED: NextDecade Corp.’s FID to Fuel Second Wave of US Exporting Power
Recommended Reading
Keeping it Tight: Diversified Energy Clamps Down on Methane Emissions
2024-04-24 - Diversified Energy wants to educate on emission reduction successes while debunking junk science.
MethaneSAT: EDF’s Eye in the Sky Targets E&P Emissions
2024-03-07 - The Environmental Defense Fund and Harvard University recently launched MethaneSAT, a satellite tracking methane emissions. The project’s primary target: oil and gas operators.
CAPP Forecasts $40.6B in Canadian Upstream Capex in 2024
2024-02-27 - The number is slightly over the estimated 2023 capex spend; CAPP cites uncertain emissions policy as a factor in investment decisions.
Majority of Recent CO2 Emissions Linked to 57 Producers - Report
2024-04-03 - The world's top three CO2-emitting companies in the period were state-owned oil firm Saudi Aramco, Russia's state-owned energy giant Gazprom and state-owned producer Coal India, the report said.
Qnergy Tackles Methane Venting Emissions
2024-03-13 - Pneumatic controllers, powered by natural gas, account for a large part of the oil and gas industry’s methane emissions. Compressed air can change that, experts say.