
Staff at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has issued a final supplemental environmental impact statement (SEIS) for NextDecade Corp.’s Rio Grande LNG and the associated pipeline project owned by Enbridge Inc.
FERC’s ongoing review covers the first five of eight liquefaction trains planned for the project. Trains I to V each have a designed capacity of 5.4 million metric tons per annum (MMtpa).
Meanwhile the Rio Bravo Pipeline is designed to carry up to 4.5 billion cubic feet a day of natural gas from the Agua Dulce supply area to the liquefaction facility in Brownsville, Texas.
The new SEIS is in response to last year’s remand by the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit of FERC’s reauthorization of the projects, according to a FERC statement online.
In August 2024, the court vacated FERC’s order issued April 2023 because the commission had not issued a SEIS in reauthorizing the project. Last year’s court ruling was the second remand for the project.
On March 18, 2025, NextDecade said the court revised its August 2024 ruling and remanded without vacatur FERC’s order.
In the new SEIS, “FERC staff conclude that… communities in the areas near the Rio Grande LNG Terminal may experience significant cumulative visual impacts”, FERC said last week.
“Specific to air quality impacts, we clarify that the project’s air quality impacts on communities with environmental justice concerns would also be disproportionate and adverse; however, RG LNG’s air quality analysis demonstrates that air quality impacts near the Rio Grande LNG Terminal would not be significant, with the exception of two discrete areas just north of the LNG terminal where the cumulative model shows an exceedance of the annual PM2.5 SIL, and thus we conclude air quality impacts in those areas would be significant.
“Specific to the RB Pipeline, the revised air quality dispersion modeling that shows that impacts from Compressor Station 1 would not exceed the NAAQS. Therefore, air quality impacts on communities with environmental justice concerns from operation of Compressor Station 1 would be less than significant.
“For all other resources, FERC staff continues to conclude that approval of the projects would result in less than significant impacts, with implementation of the environmental conditions set forth in the Commission’s prior authorizations for the project, and the additional mitigation measures recommended in the final supplemental EIS”.
The new SEIS does not recommend requiring a carbon capture and storage component for FERC to approve Rio Grande LNG.
“The Commission will take into consideration the analysis and conclusions of the final supplemental EIS in its further merits order for the project”, the statement said.
NextDecade said in its latest business update, “FERC anticipates issuing a final order on the remand by November 20, 2025”.
Rio Grande LNG has already been permitted by the DOE to export to FTA and non-FTA countries.
Phase I, which consists of trains I to III, is under construction. NextDecade announced a FID (final investment decision) on phase 1 in July 2023, earmarking $18.4 billion then. The project had been planned to have a carbon capture component. However, NextDecade said August 2024, it had withdrawn its permit application to build the emission mitigation component.
NextDecade is working toward FIDs for trains IV and V. Train IV’s production has been fully subscribed, according to the company.
“[T]he company is developing and beginning the permitting process for trains VI through VIII”, NextDecade added in the business update.
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