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US firm conducts 2000th STS LNG transfer in Bay


Published : 10 Apr 2021 09:31 PM | Updated : 11 Apr 2021 12:36 AM

Excelerate Energy, a US-based LNG company, has touched a milestone by conducting its 2000th commercial ship-to-ship (STS) transfer of liquefied natural gas (LNG) at its Moheshkhali Floating LNG (MLNG) terminal located offshore Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal.

A total of 144,191 cubic meters of LNG were transferred using the double-banked LNG transfer system using Excelerate’s Floating Storage Regasification Unit (FSRU) named excellence and a conventional LNG carrier in Bay of Bengal this week. 

In a statement on Saturday, Excelerate Energy’s Chief Operating Officer Cal Bancroft expressed his satisfaction for achieving the milestone of 2000th STS transfer in the Bay of Bengal as Excelerate represented a 20 percent uplift in gas supply to Bangladesh.

“Having achieved this milestone safely is a testament to the hard work and dedication of our team and vessel crews worldwide,” he said in the statement.

Since 2018, Excelerate has provided clean and reliable energy to Bangladesh through its two FSRUs located offshore in the Bay of Bengal while it has so far successfully transferred over 236,405,000 cubic meters of LNG using its STS protocol worldwide in last 14 years after conducting its first commercial STS transfer in 2007.   

“Operating in challenging locations like the Bay of Bengal is why customers can count on our teams to deliver much-needed energy,” Bancroft said.  

The Excelerate’s MLNG terminal is the Bangladesh’s first LNG import facility while its two FSRU have been allowing for a more resilient gas and power grid for the Chattogram region that were previously underserved.

The US-based energy company has so far imported over 157 cargoes of LNG and delivered an excess of 500 million MMBtu of natural gas into the Bangladeshi market.

In March, Bangladesh reached its highest level of gas output with around 837 million cubic feet per day of natural gas while the government continues to increase its LNG imports to meet the rising domestic demand.