New supplies of liquefied natural gas take time to develop, and significant new capacity will only start kicking in over the coming years, a senior Exxon Mobil Corp. executive said.
The U.S. has extended the comment period on a federal study of the economic and environmental impacts of the booming liquefied natural gas (LNG) export business after advisers had urged President Donald Trump to take a patient approach to prevent approvals from getting overturned in court.
U.S. President Donald Trump has ended the moratorium on new liquefied natural gas export permits imposed by his predecessor Joe Biden in January 2024.
The Biden Administration’s January 2024 pause on liquified natural gas (LNG) exports to non-free trade agreement countries merely formalized a de facto ban that had been in p
Three companies developing liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects in Texas and Louisiana said they will move full speed ahead with their plans after U.S. President Donald Trump lifted the previous administration's freeze on export permits.
One of the president’s executive orders offers a new path for getting a gas development across the finish line.
Johnson said that he believed that Biden was not actively managing the country and was instead “signing what others were putting in front of him.” The order signed by Biden, which paused liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports to Europe, prompted Johnson to ask, "Who is running the country?"
Donald Trump ended the pause on liquefied natural gas export permit approvals implemented by the Biden Energy Department, which the industry hated.
Advisers to President-elect Donald Trump are reportedly urging him to take a patient approach to restart approvals for liquefied natural gas
The Republican's executive order, which was expected, effectively reverses a pause on permits for new projects that former President Joe Biden put in place in early 2024
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Industry praise lifting of LNG permitting pause
The move came in an executive order directed at energy and ordered the Energy Department to resume reviewing applications for new permits. The pause began last January when then-President Joe Biden ordered his administration to study the climate, economic and social security implications of increasing LNG exports.
Expansion plans could make company second largest emitter of greenhouse gases from LNG export terminals by 2030, report claims