Korea weighs Louisiana LNG project for $200 bln US investment package

By Kim Hee-su Posted : May 7, 2026, 10:45 Updated : May 7, 2026, 10:46
Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan speaks to reporters upon arriving at Dulles International Airport near Washington on May 6, 2026. Yonhap
SEOUL, May 07 (AJP) - South Korea has begun reviewing a liquefied natural gas export terminal project in Louisiana as a potential first project under its $200 billion strategic investment package with the U.S., officials and industry sources said Thursday.

The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy recently selected a consortium of Samil PwC and Kim & Chang to advise on the Louisiana LNG project, part of the Korea-U.S. strategic investment package agreed last year.

Industry watchers say the Louisiana LNG project reflects Washington’s broader push to increase LNG exports, particularly as demand for non-Russian energy has grown in Europe following the war in Ukraine and Asian demand for alternative supplies has risen amid instability around the Strait of Hormuz.

The project involves building export infrastructure to liquefy and ship natural gas produced along the U.S. Gulf Coast to markets in Europe and Asia.

For South Korea, however, the key issue will be whether the investment can generate tangible benefits for Korean companies, rather than simply meeting U.S. demands.

Seoul is expected to seek conditions that allow Korean firms to participate in construction, supply steel and equipment, and secure stable access to U.S. LNG.

The move comes as Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan departed for North America on Tuesday for a four-day trip focused on advancing investment talks with the U.S. and strengthening industrial cooperation with Canada.

Kim arrived in Washington on Thursday after visiting Ottawa, where he sought Canadian support for Korean companies bidding for the country’s submarine procurement project. He said the U.S. Trade Representative’s ongoing Section 301 investigation into countries including South Korea and Japan appeared to be aimed at restoring the 15 percent reciprocal tariff that had been ruled unlawful.

“I understand the purpose of the investigation is to restore the 15 percent tariff,” Kim said. “Any U.S. measures following the investigation are likely to remain within that scope, and we will make every effort to ensure that they do.”

Kim also pushed back against concerns that South Korea was moving slower than Japan in implementing its U.S. investment package.

“Specific projects cannot be realized simply by announcing them. They need to be carried out in concrete terms,” he said.
 
Courtesy of Woodside Energy
Kim said details could be discussed only after the special act on U.S. investment takes effect in June. The special act on the management of Korea-U.S. strategic investment was passed by the National Assembly on March 12 and is scheduled to take effect on June 18.

Asked about the Louisiana LNG project, Kim stopped short of confirming it as the first investment.

“It is true that the Louisiana project was among the projects being reviewed,” Kim said. “But we are not yet at a stage where we can say whether it will become the first project.”

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