As they point out below, Next Decade has yet to make a penney of revenue, has not put a shovel to a single project yet and is literally years behind schedule.
The company has failed to meet deadline after deadline.
In other words, according to the environmental group, this is not a "done deal."
2) What has NextDecade been up to?
I'll be focusing here on NextDecade and its many projects (Rio Grande LNG, Rio Bravo Pipeline, Galveston Bay LNG & Pipeline Header System, and its Inisfree FSRU deal with the Irish Port of Cork). It wants to make everyone believe all its projects are done deals. Texas LNG and Annova LNG also want everyone to believe their projects are done deals. NONE OF THEM ARE DONE DEALS. But here let's just look at NextDecade.
Lately, NextDecade proudly announced on 12-12-2018 that the Texas Commission for Environmental Quality had approved a series of air quality permits for its Rio Grande LNG project, on 03-07-2019 that it had executed a site lease for its Rio Grande LNG project, and on 04-01-2019 that Shell had signed a 20 year agreement to buy LNG from the Rio Grande LNG project.
Making Rio Grande LNG look like a Done Deal. BUT it's not.
Why?
Because NextDecade was formed in November 2010, has yet to earn it's first penney of revenue, and has yet to put shovel to ground anywhere. It won't be getting any revenue until it starts producing LNG. It says it will start producing LNG in 2013.
But will it?
NextDecade has a solid history of falling behind schedule.
For example:
Back in March 2015, Rio Grande LNG said it expected FERC approval in February 2017, expected to start construction in June 2017, and expected to be operational by the 4th Quarter of 2020.
Then NextDecade's 2018 Annual Report stated that it had failed to meet three of the four milestone deadline that were included in it's July 2017 merger deal with the Harmony Merger Corporation. In addition, there's no way it can meet the 4th deadline. The deadlines were:
In addition, it's also falling behind on its proposed Galveston Bay LNG & Pipeline Header System projects. I just checked that project's website today (http://galvestonbaylng.com/).
Well what about its Inisfree FSRU project? There's considerable mystery about NextDecade's supposed Inisfree FSRU joint project with the Irish Port of Cork. Is it for real, or just for show? It's included on Slide 18 in NextDecade's 04-01-2019 Corporate Presentation (available at https://investors.next-decade.
Right now, NextDecade seems to be the only source of the minimal amount of information available on its Inisfree FSRU venture. And NextDecade seems to have a habit of over promising and overexaggerating such things.
But TCEQ's 12-12-2018 permits for Rio Grande LNG show NextDecade's moving strongly forward, no?
See NextDecade's 12-12-2018 announcement at https://www.businesswire.com/
More importantly, NextDecade also says "all requests for hearing and a motion for reconsideration were denied" -- as if that was a good thing in its favor. Port Isabel and Laguna Vista were among the folks requesting Contested Hearings. So NextDecade appreciates TCEQ throwing Port Isabel and Luna Vista under the Rio Grande LNG bus??? Some of the Contested Hearing requests are headed to state court. NextDecade has the permits, but can it avoid the hearings?
Another Question: Will the Port Isabel Independent School District be more willing to reconsider its 2016 rejection of Rio Grande LNG's request for a tax break, since NextDecade has show such disregard for the City of Port Isabel?
But doesn't the 03-07-2019 enactment of the Rio Grande LNG lease with the Port show it moving strongly forward?
See NextDecade's announcement of the 03-07-2019 deal at https://www.businesswire.com/
Right now, NextDecade's pay for an ongoing "Option To Lease" on the 940 or so acres -- at about 10% of what leasing the acreage will cost it. The present Option To Lease is good until this November. Then NextDecade has make the payments needed to cement the deal, or it has to turn the acreage back over to the Port.
So the lease won't really be a done deal until November, when NextDecade's actual lease will start, if it has the required $1.5 million security deposit and the money it needs to pay the $6.3 million a year lease price year to year over the next 30 years (with two possible 10 year extensins beyond the initial 30 years). Will NextDecade be good for the money when the money comes due? It won't actually start earning any money until possibly 2023. So that's up to the investors and how much money they're will to risk on the project.
But doesn't the 04-01-2019 NextDecade deal with Shell show it's moving ever onward and upward towards success?
Well, NextDecade really hopes you think so. Announcing the successful completion of milestone after milestone. The TCEQ permits. The Lease. And now it's deal with Shell.
But don't forget that it's missed important milestones in the past. And the deal with Shell isn't as big as NextDecade is making it out to be. See its 04-01-2019 announcement at https://www.businesswire.
NextDecade of course gives itself center stage in completing this deal at the LNG2019 conference in Shanghai, China, and boasts about how its "the first-ever long-term contract with LNG produced out of the United States to be indexed to Brent and comes with full destination flexibility. But according to a 04-04-2014 The Motley Fool article, the 2 million tons a year is just
And at the same LNG2019 conference, Tellurian Inc and French oil and gas major Total SA signed a deal for 1.5 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) of LNG to be produced at Tellurian's Driftwood LNG project in Louisiana. And Energy Transfer, also at the conference, is partnering with Shell as well to build a LNG export facility in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Which sounds like a bigger deal than Shell's new deal with NextDecade.
Actually, it's rather amazing that NextDecade has stayed in business as long as it has.
Considering that it hasn't earned a single penny of income since it was incorporated in November 2010 and won't be able to produce and sell LNG until 2023 at the earliest. And even then starting with just two or three of its planned LNG liquefaction production trains even then. Its main challenge right now is to get enough investors to give it enough upfront money to complete a solid deal with the EPC construction company and to make its Final Investment Decision by September 2019 -- or at least in time to finance its lease at the Port of Brownsville by November 2019.
According to its 2018 Annual Report,
Yes, extended funding by investors is common for such LNG projects -- but not over a 12 plus year period. And NextDecade could rapidly burn through the $72 million cash management fund before it starts procucing LNG by 2013 (or so). Especially if it wants to keep any hope alive for its proposed Galveston Bay LNG and Inisfree FSRU projects in the meantime.
Which is all I have to say about NextDecade and its paired Rio Grande LNG and Rio Bravo Pipeline projects for now. Let me know if you've read through this whole email from top to bottom. Companies like NextDecade survive as long as they do, in part, because few people have the time and patience to read through something like this. NextDecade's amazing in a bad way. You're amazing in a good way.
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"A fool and his money are easily parted," LNG is the new Tenaska. Big promises and not a single drop produced. But buy in now, dupes
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