Carlyle-backed Crescent Midstream to Develop $1 Billion Carbon Capture Project in Louisiana
(Reuters) — Oil pipeline firm Crescent Midstream, which is backed by investment firm Carlyle Group, said on Friday it would jointly develop and construct a carbon capture and storage project in Lake Charles, Louisiana.
The nearly $1 billion project would capture carbon dioxide from an Entergy-owned natural gas-fired power plant, the 994 MW Lake Charles power station.
Collaborating with Samsung E&A and Honeywell's technologies, the project is expected to capture up to 3 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year.
The project is expected to be completed in 2028, Crescent said in an emailed response.
Crescent Midstream owns nearly 1,200 miles of pipelines around Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexico which transport almost 200 million barrels of crude oil annually, its website showed.
Related News
Related News

- Trump Puts Keystone XL Pipeline Back in Discussion, Though Revival Faces Developer Resistance
- Army Corps Lists Enbridge’s Line 5 as ‘Emergency’ Project Eligible to Bypass Environmental Review
- Missouri Loses Control Over 1.5 Million-Mile Gas Pipeline Network as Feds Step In
- Energy Transfer Wins New York Court Ruling in $150 Million Pipeline Fraud Case
- $3 Billion Natural Gas Pipeline Expansion to Add 1.3 Bcf Capacity in Southeast Region
- Kinder Morgan Approves $1.4 Billion Mississippi Crossing Project to Boost Southeast Gas Supply
- Army Corps Lists Enbridge’s Line 5 as ‘Emergency’ Project Eligible to Bypass Environmental Review
- India’s GAIL Eyes U.S. LNG Deals Following Trump’s Policy Shift
- TC Energy Beats Q4 Profit Estimates, Driven by Mexico Pipelines' Success
- Michigan Court Backs Permits for Enbridge’s Line 5 Pipeline Tunnel Project
Comments