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CERAWEEK-Project funding less important for brand-new LNG projects, Venture Global CEO states

More financing for future liquefied gas (LNG) plants will count on internal financing rather of the task funding that has actually spent for most tasks to date, Endeavor Global LNG's CEO stated on Tuesday.

The U.S. has become the world's largest LNG exporter due to the shale gas revolution and building and construction of huge liquefaction plants, the majority of moneyed by bank and project funding.

Significantly we will see less task financing and more funding from the balance sheet,, said Endeavor Global LNG CEO Michael Sabel. In part, the changeover reflects the growth of expansion, or brownfield, projects as opposed to newly developed LNG plants.

Sabel told an S&P Global panel at CERAweek that his business was spending an average of $700 million per month on plant construction.

This year, it prepares to spend $3.5 billion on its proposed Calcasieu Pass 2 (CP2) LNG task, although it has yet to get regulative approvals.

CP2 is the largest LNG job affected by a decision by President Joe Biden's administration not to momentarily pause LNG export allows for new ecological reviews.

We would not be investing that cash unless we did not feel the announced time out was not momentary, stated Sabel.

The Arlington, Virginia, company in 2015 completed $21. billion in job funding for its Plaquemines LNG plant in. Louisiana, the largest in the industry's history.

(source: Reuters)