Kimmeridge’s Co-founder and Managing Partner Ben Dell details how Commonwealth LNG came to be and the future of the project as the company is optimistic on an FID in the first half of 2025, in this Hart Energy Exclusive interview.
Executives from Aethon Energy, Aker Solutions, Chevron and NOV said efficiency and repeatability—not cramming new technologies into every venture—are key to lowering costs associated with capturing CO2.
The start-up of LNG Canada in mid-2025 will give its five joint venture partners access to liquefaction and international trade, which wasn’t a possibility from Canada before, an LNG Canada vice president told Hart Energy.
Direct air capture technologies are technically and financially challenging, but efforts are underway to change that.
From LNG to direct air capture, Chris Ashton, CEO of Worley, said economic incentives aren’t “on a pace and scale that are necessary for us to move things forward.”
As global power demand rises, much of the world is unable to grasp the need for gas or the connection to LNG, experts said.
Methane emissions are falling in parts of the world as companies such as EQT, led by CEO Toby Rice, make strides to reduce emissions in their operations, although the task is not without challenges.
Energy executives from companies such as Cheniere and Woodside are planning for the energy transition—and natural gas as part of it.
International Energy Forum Secretary General Joseph McMonigle says a single, linear pathway to the energy transition is “misguided and an outdated approach.”
International commodities trading house Vitol sees growing demand for U.S. shale gas to spur LNG exports to China, India and emerging economies in Asia.