Connect Summer 2016 | Page 5

GULF TRACE VIDEO LNG FACTS Construction continues on the seven-mile Gulf Trace expansion project, designed to expand the existing pipeline system to deliver gas to the Sabine Pass Liquefaction Facility 2 in Cameron Parish, Louisiana. The project will include two compressor stations and modifications to the existing Transco mainline. “Right before the pipe drops off the rack, we hook on floats,” Owen says. “Because our trench is filled with water the entire length, we literally just guide the pipe right down the right of way one piece at a time. Certified divers then remove the floats and the pipe gets placed underground.” The concrete coating helps ensure the pipe remains in place and does not float out of the ground after installed due to water pressures from the high water table in the coastal marsh area. “We put the concrete around the pipe to neutralize the buoyancy effect, and the concrete helps keep the pipe settled,” Owen explains. Offsite Staging Adding to the uniqueness of this project is the fact that one of the compressor stations is actually being prefabricated at another location. The compressor facility that will ultimately be added to Transco Station 44 in Johnson Bayou, Louisiana, is being put together in Channelview, Texas. After being staged there, it will be moved piece by piece by truck and then reassembled at Station 44. “The site there at Station 44 doesn’t have a lot of extra staging space so we are staging the unit at the facility in Texas and then moving the parts to the Station 44 site as we need them for assembly of the facility at the site,” Owen says. That compressor station will be placed on a 20-foot platform to account for the potential for high tides that can occur in the Gulf Coast during a hurricane. It’s just another key step in this exceptional engineering and construction effort that is designed with one goal in mind — providing the key infrastructure needed to help our customer meet its needs. “When we go on line with this expansion of the Transco pipeline system, we are going to be delivering up to 1.2 Bcf/d (billion cubic feet per day) of natural gas to Cheniere,” explains Owen. “There’s a lot of gas that needs to come this direction.” ■ Selling some of America’s natural gas resources globally has the potential to create thousands of new jobs, grow manufacturing, generate billions of dollars in royalties and new government revenues and expand U.S. trade. According to the U.S. International Trade Administration, each $1 billion of liquefield natural gas (LNG) exports could result in more than 6,000 new jobs. Thus, $13 billion to $25 billion worth of LNG exports could mean the creation of between 75,000 and 150,000 new American jobs. Jobs would be created in natural gas production, the steel industry, pipefitting and many other industries – benefitting communities across the U.S. A tanker docks at an LNG import terminal in Nynäshamn, Sweden. 5