Next wave of North American LNG export projects to face labor challenges
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[July 10, 2023] By
Curtis Williams and Nia Williams
HOUSTON (Reuters) - A coming wave of North American liquefied natural
gas (LNG) export projects faces staffing challenges that are prompting
some of the biggest developers to expand training and coordinate
projects to keep construction workers.
There are eight export projects now under way that when completed would
add 86 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) capacity of the chilled natural
gas. The projects have already created thousands of construction jobs
and are soon to employ hundreds of operators.
Paul Marsden, head of Bechtel Corp's Energy global business unit, which
has built 30% of the world's LNG plants in the last 20 years, said
industry, labor and education must work together to provide the training
and workers to staff all the projects.
"Labor has grown as an inflationary concern for everyone in the
industry. We need to actively forecast and manage labor availability and
supply chain like never before," Marsden said in an interview via email
last week.
In the past, soaring construction costs in U.S. LNG projects hurt
project economics and even led to bankruptcy for one major contractor,
said Alex Munton, a director at consultancy Rapidan Energy Group.
"We have multiple projects that are under way at the same time and four
mega projects, with the possibility of a fifth to be announced soon, and
they require the same type of labor," he said. "This will drive up labor
costs, increase schedule risks and create productivity issues."
Bechtel is developing projects with some 27 MTPA of new capacity,
including Sempra's Port Arthur LNG project and an expansion at Cheniere
Energy's Corpus Christi plant, with an additional 29 MTPA waiting for
formal approvals to move ahead.
WORKERS NEEDED
At present Bechtel has more than 3,000 professionals working on its LNG
projects. At peak, the company expects the number to grow to close to
20,000 craft professionals, Marsden said.
Cheniere Energy, one of Bechtel's largest customers and the biggest LNG
exporter in the U.S., has scheduled its construction so it can move
existing workers from the Corpus Christi expansion to its next project
when that gets going, to ensure it does not lose workers. Two other
projects - Golden Pass LNG and Plaquemines LNG - have added workers and
are moving to 24-hour work schedules.
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The marine offloading facility at the
LNG Canada site is pictured, in Kitimat, Canada, September 2022. LNG
Canada/Handout via REUTER
Cheniere preordered material for its newer Corpus Christi project to
avoid inflation, said Chief Operating Officer Corey Grindal.
"We expect to be able to move from Stage 3 straight in to our
further expansion, which is basically on the same compound, so we
believe that with our contractor, Bechtel, we will be able to retain
our workers," Grindal said.
Cheniere and Bechtel are training workers using virtual simulations
or via partnerships with local schools.
LNG Canada, located in Kitimat in a remote corner of British
Columbia, invested more than C$5 million ($3.74 million) in training
including at local colleges, the company said.
The local area has few big facilities, "so we're trying to make sure
we develop that workforce locally," LNG Canada CEO Jason Klein said.
MODULAR DESIGNS
Some newer plants are employing modular and pre-built components to
avoid the inflationary pressure of a stick-built plant by
outsourcing some of the construction to countries with lower labor
costs.
"We had more than 10,000 people at a time in different yards in
China, and that just would not be possible in Kitimat," Klein said.
Commonwealth LNG, which hopes to get a financial green light for its
first project by the end of the year, is also looking to modular
plant designs to lower labor costs.
"The Australian projects, the initial ones, were as much as two to
three thousand dollars per tonne of production, said Chairman Paul
Varello. "Our number is like $700 per tonne."
Venture Global LNG stitched together 18 liquefaction units in its
highly modular Calcasieu Pass LNG plant, allowing it to open the
facility in what it said was record time. But problems with the
equipment have prevented it from delivering contract cargoes, the
company has said. First commercial cargoes will not be available
until 2024, two years after processing began.
(Reporting by Curtis Williams in Houston and Nia Williams in British
Columbia; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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