Exports of liquefied natural gas from Canada’s LNG Canada plant topped one million tonnes in April, setting a monthly record, according to LSEG data.
LNG Canada is the country’s first major LNG export facility and the first on North America’s West Coast, giving it direct access to Asia, the world’s largest LNG market.
All volumes produced by the plant went to Asia in April, with more than half sold to South Korea. One cargo was delivered directly to China.
China has not been importing LNG from the US since Washington imposed sanctions during the Trump administration, instead opting to resell US-sourced LNG to other countries to capitalise on higher spot-market prices compared with lower long-term contract prices agreed upon with US producers.
On April 24, the tanker Qingcheng discharged its cargo at the Dongjiakou terminal after a roughly three-week voyage from Canada to China.
LNG Canada said bringing any LNG facility into operations is a managed and sequenced process and its owners have so far shipped 79 LNG cargoes.
LNG Canada is a joint venture between Shell, Malaysia’s Petronas, PetroChina, Japan’s Mitsubishi Corp and South Korea’s KOGAS.
The plant has had a slow startup since beginning LNG production in June and is not yet operating at full capacity. It can export up to 14 million tonnes per year, equivalent to around 1.16 million tonnes per month.
(Reporting by Curtis Williams in Houston; Editing Rod Nickel and Stephen Coates)