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Caturus Greenlights $13 Billion Louisiana LNG Export Terminal

By MGN EditorialMay 18, 2026 at 04:06 PM

US energy company Caturus has reached a final investment decision on a $13 billion LNG export project in Louisiana, marking a significant milestone for American LNG export capacity.

## Caturus Greenlights $13 Billion Louisiana LNG Export Terminal American integrated gas and liquefied natural gas company Caturus has announced a final investment decision (FID) for its major LNG export project under development in Louisiana, moving the $13 billion facility into the execution phase, according to Offshore Energy. Caturus, which is controlled by energy-focused alternative investment manager Kimmeridge, confirmed the FID signals the project's transition from development into active construction and delivery planning — a critical threshold in the lifecycle of large-scale energy infrastructure. ### Strategic Significance The decision comes at a time of sustained global demand for US LNG, particularly from European buyers seeking to reduce dependence on Russian pipeline gas, and from Asian markets continuing to expand gas-fired power generation capacity. Louisiana's Gulf Coast location provides established logistical advantages, including deep-water access and proximity to existing pipeline infrastructure feeding from major US shale production basins. Final investment decisions of this scale represent a firm commitment of capital and typically trigger long-term offtake agreements, engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts, and project financing arrangements. The $13 billion price tag places this project among the larger LNG export developments currently advancing in the United States. ### US LNG Expansion Continues The Caturus FID adds to a growing pipeline of US LNG export capacity that has positioned the United States as the world's largest LNG exporter in recent years. Industry analysts have noted that projects securing FIDs in the current environment benefit from a relatively supportive regulatory backdrop and strong long-term contracted demand from international buyers. For the maritime sector, large-scale LNG export terminals directly influence vessel demand, with each operational facility typically requiring dedicated LNG carrier fleets for offtake logistics. The commissioning of new export capacity in the Gulf of Mexico region is expected to sustain ordering activity for LNG carriers in the coming years. Further details on the project's construction timeline, offtake agreements, and shipping logistics are anticipated as Caturus advances through the execution phase.
#LNG#LNG export#final investment decision#US LNG#Louisiana#Caturus#Kimmeridge#LNG carriers#offshore energy#gas infrastructure

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