Tensions Are Starting to Brew Over Waterways for US LNG Cargoes

Storage containers at the Venture Global Plaquemines liquefied natural gas export facility in Port Sulphur, Louisiana.Photographer: Kathleen Flynn/Bloomberg

One of the US largest exporters of liquefied natural gas, Venture Global Inc., is raising questions over how to share a common waterway with a planned neighbor — it’s a move that underscores a coming bottleneck for shipping space in an energy sector that the Trump administration is supporting for increased exports.

The US, already the biggest global exporter of the fuel, is on track to nearly double its current capacity with a massive buildout of six projects under construction in Texas and Louisiana. And even more are in advanced stages of development as President Donald Trump has made moves to increase the flow of cargoes from the US.