A state economist is warning of the near-term effects of the U.S. Department of Energy’s temporary pause on liquefied natural gas export authorizations.
More than a month has passed since the DOE first announced a temporary pause on reviewing any pending or newly filed LNG export applications to non-Free Trade Agreement countries.
While several export projects have already sailed through the approval process, roughly 9 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) of LNG exports pending approvals are at stake, says Dean Foreman, chief economist at the Texas Oil and Gas Association.
“These prospective approvals translate to a 20% increase in all of Texas natural gas production – 20%,” he told the Business Journal.
San Antonio Business Journal









