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James Emanuel's avatar

LNG CANADA, NOW ONLY WEEKS AWAY FROM LIFT OFF

LNG Canada is the largest private-sector investment in the country’s history and has taken years to get off the ground.

Shell controls a 40% stake in the project, with Petronas holding 25%, PetroChina and Mitsubishi Corp 15% each and Korea Gas Corp 5%

Petronas’ chief executive Tengku Muhammad Taufik stated “Canada is crucial to our ambitions to preserve our position in the LNG space.”

Petronas has sent an LNG carrier to export its first cargoes. The 174,000-cbm Puteri Sejinjang (built 2024) is planned to arrive on 29 June at the new 14-mpta LNG Canada plant near Kitimat on Canada’s west coast.

This will create a huge tailwind for companies operating in the Canadian oil and gas sector, such as Enterprise Group.

James Emanuel's avatar

Since shipping its first LNG cargo from Kitimat at the end of June 2025, Canada has firmly established itself as a new and influential player in the global LNG market. The Kitimat terminal successfully sent multiple shipments to key Asian markets like South Korea and Japan within weeks, marking a major milestone for North America’s Pacific coast LNG exports. While initial production from LNG Canada’s Phase 1 trains began below capacity due to some technical challenges, the facility is steadily ramping up and is expected to hit its full output of 14 million tonnes per annum over the next 12 to 18 months.

This increase in Canadian LNG exports is part of a much larger surge in global LNG supply slated for 2025, with worldwide liquefaction capacity expanding by nearly 47 million tonnes per year—more than triple the additions made in 2024. North America is at the heart of this growth, with combined exports from Canada, the U.S., and Mexico projected to rise by 27% this year alone. This expansion is not only boosting total trade volumes, which grew by about 4% in the first half of 2025 compared to 2024, but is also reshaping global trade dynamics. Canada’s west coast advantage drastically cuts shipping times to Asia, making its LNG especially competitive in key import markets.

On the demand side, Europe has ramped up LNG imports by 25% in the first half of 2025 to offset reductions in pipeline gas supplies from Russia and Norway, while Asian import volumes remain strong though slightly tempered. This robust demand combined with the increasing supply pipeline from North America is transforming the global LNG landscape. The addition of Kitimat and ongoing expansions in the U.S. are propelling North America to the forefront of the LNG export world, offering a diverse, reliable energy source that aligns closely with the evolving geopolitical and energy security considerations of the world’s biggest gas consumers.

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