The US in 2025 became the first country to export more than 100 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas in a single year, powered by the startup of production from new plants, preliminary data from LSEG showed.
The world’s largest LNG exporter sold 111 tonnes of the fuel, almost 20 tonnes more than its nearest rival Qatar and nearly 23 tonnes more than it did last year, LSEG data showed.
US shipments accounted for roughly a quarter of global LNG exports last year.
Venture Global’s Plaquemines facility – the country’s second-largest export plant – delivered 16.4 tonnes in 2025 after sending its first cargo in December 2024, LSEG data showed.
Alex Munton, director of global gas and LNG at research firm Rapidan Energy Group, said the 24 per cent year-on-year growth came down to high utilisation across onstream terminals and a rapid ramp up at new facilities.
The annual record was supported by a monthly milestone in December when the US exported 11.5 tonnes, a record for a single month, the data showed.
In 2025, the US set five monthly production records.
“It is remarkable that in nine years the US has gone from zero LNG exports to more than 100 tonnes, and the success validates the US approach of selling free on board and pulling gas off the grid and the reliability of US supplies,” Jason Feer, head of business intelligence at shipping firm Poten and Partners, said.
Europe remained the main destination for US LNG, with 9 tonnes sold to the continent last month as the Northern Hemisphere winter deepened and Europe reduced its purchases of Russian gas, LSEG ship tracking data show.
Türkiye, which supplies Europe with some Russian gas, stepped up its purchases of US LNG in December, buying 1.45 tonnes.
In December, the US sold 1.23 tonnes of the super chilled gas to Asia, down from November’s 1.75 tonnes, the data showed.
Egypt continues to buy significant amounts of US LNG cargoes amid its natural gas shortages, buying 0.78 tonnes in December, while the Americas region took 0.42 tonnes.
With Plaquemines targeting full capacity this year, Cheniere’s smaller modular plants expected to either be at full volume or ramping up, and the first train at Golden Pass LNG – a joint venture between QatarEnergy and Exxon Mobil – set to begin production in the first quarter of 2026, Feer predicts the US could increase its annual production this year by another 20 tonnes.