By Diego Mendoza-Moyers
The San Antonio Express-News, Feb. 12, 2022,
CORPUS CHRISTI — It can be hard to tell from the calm waterfront park on the north side of Port Aransas, but the region around Corpus Christi Bay is a growing energy superhighway that’s reshaping global markets.
After its invasion of Ukraine last year, European nations that relied on Russia to supply nearly half of the natural gas needed to heat their homes and generate their electricity began looking for other sources. They found them in Texas where producers including Cheniere, which operates a massive liquefied natural gas export terminal in Corpus Christi Bay, stepped up to fill the void.
The result has been a huge shift in the global energy landscape that’s accelerated rapidly over the past year. The Port of Corpus Christi, the top port for U.S. energy exports, has been a major hub in the transition.
“We are moving wholly and solely Texas oil and Texas gas through the port,” CEO Sean Strawbridge said, noting a difference between Corpus Christi and other Gulf Coast ports. “There’s a growing global demand for energy, and … more and more demand centers are turning to the U.S for their energy needs. That bodes well for the state’s economy.”
Increasing LNG exports are part of a broader expansion at Corpus Christi since the U.S. lifted a ban on crude oil exports in 2015. The port moved 2 million barrels of crude oil per day last year — 60 percent of all crude exports from the U.S. — and a 15 percent increase from 2021.
The growth is continuing. This year, the port expects revenue to reach $196 million, up from $184 million in 2022 and $83 million in 2016. It moved a record 188 million tons last year — cargoes consisting of more than just crude oil and refined products.
Ships anchored in the ship channel on a recent day were being loaded with grain from multistory elevators while a tanker across the channel, already loaded with about 700,000 barrels of crude, waited for fog to clear so it could head back to sea. Farther down the channel, cement imported from Turkey was being placed on trucks and rail cars for delivery to construction sites near Corpus Christi and in Central Texas.
And nearby, a huge mound of neon-yellow sulfur, a refinery byproduct owned by a collection of refiners including San Antonio-based Valero Energy Corp., was about to be shipped to Australia to be used in munitions and fireworks.
Valero owns two refineries along the Corpus Christi Ship Channel, while San Antonio’s NuStar Energy operates storage terminals and a pipeline network for crude oil and refined products in Corpus Christi.
‘Replaced Russian gas’
But gas is leading the growth.
Exports of LNG from Corpus Christi were 100 times greater in 2022 than in 2018 when Cheniere’s facility went online, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. About 75 percent of LNG cargoes that left Corpus Christi last year were bound for U.S. allies in Europe and East Asia that needed gas to generate power and heat homes through the winter.
Cheniere built a $17 billion facility at the port that began liquefying and exporting natural gas in 2018. The company is investing another $8 billion at the site to bring its total capacity to 25 million metric tons of LNG per year by late 2025.
Read the full article on The San Antonio Express-News.