Freeport LNG Restart Delay Causes Vessels to Seek Other Ports

November 16, 2022

A few liquefied natural gas (LNG) vessels have turned away from the Freeport LNG export plant in Texas over the past few days on expectations the plant's restart will be delayed until December or later, according to ship tracking data from Refinitiv.

Federal pipeline safety regulators on Tuesday released a heavily redacted consultant's report that blamed inadequate operating and testing procedures, human error and fatigue for the June 8 explosion that shut the Freeport plant.

Freeport had not yet submitted a request to resume service to the Department of Transportation's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) as of earlier this week. Many analysts believe that means the plant will not return until December at the earliest.

Until late last week, Freeport had said repeatedly that the plant was still on track to return in November. The company, however, did not mention a November restart, or any restart date, in comments made over the past few days.

A couple of vessels seem to have given up on a quick restart for Freeport.

Prism Brilliance, which waited outside the plant for about three weeks, was now sitting outside of Corpus Christi where Cheniere Energy Inc has an LNG export plant.

LNG Rosenrot, which was expected to arrive at Freeport in late November, has since turned around in the Atlantic Ocean and was now heading toward Gibraltar.

Prism Agility still says it is on track for Freeport, but Refinitiv's ship tracking map shows the vessel as turning back toward the east in the Atlantic.

There were still, however, a couple of vessels waiting outside Freeport - Prism Diversity has been there since late October and Prism Courage has been there since early November.


(Reuters - Reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

Logistics News

CSP Bilbao Terminal Invests $11m in New Post-Panamax Crane

CSP Bilbao Terminal Invests $11m in New Post-Panamax Crane

Hackathon Spotlights AI, Autonomous Systems for Maritime Security

Hackathon Spotlights AI, Autonomous Systems for Maritime Security

SeaRenergy Restructures Management to Compliment Company Growth, Industry Trends

SeaRenergy Restructures Management to Compliment Company Growth, Industry Trends

Sallaum Lines Orders Two 8,600-CEU Dual-Fuel PCTCs

Sallaum Lines Orders Two 8,600-CEU Dual-Fuel PCTCs

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

The Turkish Foreign Minister will visit Moscow to discuss Ukraine and the Black Sea
Manhattan erupts in chaos after Knicks victory, with a World Cup bus on fire
Japanese shippers await details on Hormuz reopening, mine clearance