Corpus Christi Port to Build Oil Export Terminal

By John Benny
Monday, October 29, 2018

Port to build oil export terminal

Private equity firm Carlyle Group will partner with the Port of Corpus Christi, the top oil export hub in the United States, to develop a major crude oil export terminal on Harbor Island.

Carlyle's announcement comes as infrastructure in the U.S. oil industry struggles to keep up with record levels of production, driven by the Permian shale patch in West Texas. Both international buyers and American producers are waiting for export capacity to increase.

Corpus Christi has its own plan to expand operations to handle larger export tankers. Commodities trader Trafigura Ltd is developing its own port about 15 miles off Corpus Christi that would handle vessels able to fully load two million barrels of oil.

Carlyle said it would arrange private funding to dredge the waters near Harbor Island to allow access to crude carriers. (https://bit.ly/2qoBEDX)

The terminal is expected to be operational in late 2020.

(Reuters Reporting by John Benny in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

Categories: Tankers Ports Finance Logistics Shale Oil & Gas Industry News Oil

Related Stories

Renewable Energy System Dedicated at Port of Long Beach

Skanska Set for South Brooklyn Marine Terminal Buildout

ILL EFFECTS: COVID Wiped 24.6m TEU off Container Market Growth

Current News

Montrose Becomes First Port in Scotland to Provide Shore Power for Vessels

Port Operator JSW Infrastructure Q4 Profit Rises 10%

The Nordic Maritime Forum 2024 will happen in Oslo

Renewable Energy System Dedicated at Port of Long Beach

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News