Next Decade LLC has signed an agreement with CB&I for the front end engineering design (FEED) and engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) terms for the Rio Grande Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) export project in Brownsville, TX. The project attained pre-filing status at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission last March (see Daily GPI, March 23). The Brownsville project, known as Rio Grande LNG, is a land-based LNG export project located on a 1,000-acre site along the northern shore of the Brownsville Shipping Channel. The project includes plans for up to six liquefaction trains with a nominal output capacity of 4.5 million tonnes of LNG per train per year. The facility is to be constructed in phases timed to meet market demand. The 1planned 40-mile proposed Rio Bravo Pipeline will supply the facility with its feed-gas, connecting the facility to the highly liquid Agua Dulce natural gas market hub.

A coalition of environmental and other groups have petitioned Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin to place a moratorium on Class II injection wells for high volumes of wastewater from hydraulically fractured (fracked) natual gas and oil wells in 16 counties. Those counties were highlighted in a recent Oklahoma Geological Survey study that concluded disposal wells, and the large amounts of produced water they handle from oil and gas operations, are “very likely” the culprit for numerous earthquakes in the state (see Shale Daily, April 22). The Coalition to Stop Induced Seismicity claimed 1,500 signatures were on its petition. Organizations making up the coalition include Clean Energy Future Oklahoma, Stop Fracking Payne County, Oklahoma Sierra Club, Oklahoma Coalition Against Induced Seismicity, OK State Conference NAACP, OKC Branch NAACP, Great Plains Tar Sands Resistance and Norman Coalition Against Fracking. Under directives issued by the Oklahoma Corporation Commission’s Oil and Gas Conservation Division in March, more than 50 disposal wells have had to shut down operations and reduce total depth to provide disposal into only the Arbuckle formation to mitigate the potential risk, 150 others have reduced their volumes by 50%, and other wells are keeping volumes below 1,000 b/d (see Shale Daily, May 11).