Woodside, Stonepeak wrap up Louisiana LNG stake sale

Australian LNG player Woodside has completed the previously announced sell-down of a 40 percent stake in its Louisiana LNG project to US private equity firm Stonepeak.

In February this year, the two firms entered into a binding deal, saying the closing of the transaction is targeted in the second quarter of 2025.

Woodside announced the completion of the deal in a statement on Wednesday.

Under the transaction, Stonepeak will provide $5.7 billion towards the expected capital expenditure for the foundation development of Louisiana LNG on an accelerated basis, contributing 75 percent of project capital expenditure in both 2025 and 2026.

Woodside said the closing payment of approximately $1.9 billion received by the company reflects Stonepeak’s 75% share of capex funding incurred since the effective date of January 1, 2025.

CEO Meg O’Neill said Stonepeak would add further value to the Louisiana LNG project.

“Our partnership with Stonepeak reflects the attractiveness of Louisiana LNG and was a key milestone towards achieving a successful final investment decision. Stonepeak is a high-quality partner, with extensive investment experience across US gas and LNG infrastructure,” she said.

Moreover, O’Neill said the accelerated capital contribution from Stonepeak enhances Louisiana LNG project returns and “strengthens our capacity for shareholder returns ahead of first cargo from the Scarborough energy project in Western Australia, targeted for the second half of 2026.”

“We continue to see strong interest from additional potential partners in Louisiana LNG,” she added.

$17.5 billion Louisiana LNG project

In April, Woodside made a final investment decision to develop the three-train, 16.5 mtpa Louisiana LNG project.

The total capital expenditure for the LNG project, pipeline, and management reserve is $17.5 billion.

Woodside noted that the development has expansion capacity for two additional LNG trains and is fully permitted for a total capacity of 27.6 mtpa.

Bechtel is the engineering, procurement, and construction contractor, under a lump sum, turnkey agreement, while the facility utilizes Chart’s liquefaction technology and Baker Hughes gas turbines.

In addition to Stonepeak, Woodside recently signed a non-binding collaboration agreement with Saudi Arabia’s energy behemoth Aramco to explore global opportunities.

This includes Aramco’s potential acquisition of an equity interest in and LNG offtake from the Louisiana LNG project.

Most Popular

Top 5 news of the week July 6-12

LNG Prime brings you the five most popular news stories on our platform during the week of July 6-12, 2026.
spot_img

More News Like This

Woodside progresses work on Louisiana LNG plant

Australian LNG player Woodside and its contractor Bechtel continue to advance construction of the 16.5 mtpa Louisiana LNG export terminal.

Woodside seals domestic gas supply deal

Australian LNG player Woodside has signed a deal with aluminum producer Alcoa to deliver domestic natural gas from its Western Australian operations.

Australia’s Woodside denies takeover talks with ExxonMobil

Australian LNG player Woodside said on Monday that it is not in discussions with US energy giant ExxonMobil regarding a potential transaction following media reports.

Woodside exercises right to buy PetroChina’s Browse LNG stake

Australian LNG player Woodside has exercised its right to pre-empt the sale of PetroChina International’s 10.67 percent participating stake in the Browse joint venture to Japan's Inpex.