The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘How One Restaurateur Transformed America’s Energy Industry’
Episode Date: August 14, 2022It was a long-shot bet on liquid natural gas, but it paid off handsomely — and turned the United States into a leading fossil-fuel exporter.The journalist Jake Bittle delves into the storied career ...of Charif Souki, the Lebanese American entrepreneur whose aptitude for risk changed the course of the American energy business.The article outlines how Mr. Souki rose from being a Los Angeles restaurant owner to becoming the co-founder and chief executive of Cheniere Energy, an oil and gas company that specialized in liquefied natural gas, and provides an insight into his thought process: “As Souki sees it,” Mr. Bittle writes, “the need to provide the world with energy in the short term outweighs the long-term demand of acting on carbon emissions.”In a time of acute climate anxiety, Mr. Souki’s rationale could strike some as outdated, even brazen. The world may be facing energy and climate crises, Mr. Souki told The New York Times, “but one is going to happen this month, and the other one is going to happen in 40 years.”“If you tell somebody, ‘You are going to run out of electricity this month,’ and then you talk to the same person about what’s going to happen in 40 years,” he said, “they will tell you, ‘What do I care about 40 years from now?’”This story was written by Jake Bittle and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Earlier this year, two or three weeks before Russia invaded Ukraine,
I was driving through Sabine Pass,
which is a fishing community in Port Arthur, Texas,
right by the Louisiana border.
You come down off this highway and over a bridge that straddles the two states,
and your whole field of view is suddenly dominated
by a colossal liquid natural gas facility
that seems to stretch all the way across the horizon.
There are six gigantic steel structures
where gas is piped through at incredibly high speeds
on its way to becoming liquid.
And there's a tower belching flames into the air
that you can see from miles away.
There are massive storage tanks, each of which could hold a 747 with room to spare.
And then there's the noise.
It's like the sound of a jet engine just hanging in the air in a loud, continuous din.
This whole complex was a liquefaction terminal for the natural gas company Chenier.
I had come all the way here to the edge of the world to report on its founder,
an energy baron named Sharif Suki.
Suki, a former restaurateur and entrepreneur originally from Lebanon,
is one of the people most responsible for shepherding the United States
from a position of energy weakness to being the
linchpin of a global energy transition. My name is Jake Biddle. I write about climate change and
energy, and I'm a contributor to the New York Times Magazine. Almost every major economy in
the world needs natural gas to function. Natural gas is a fossil fuel.
It's a cleaner fuel than coal,
but less abundant and more difficult to transport.
This was historically a problem for the United States,
which relied heavily on other countries like Canada and Saudi Arabia for its energy.
About 20 years ago, Sharif Suki got an idea
to import natural gas to the U.S.
by turning it into a liquid, what is called
liquefied natural gas, or LNG for short. Just as he set this plan into motion, a very cheap way to
extract natural gas from shale was discovered, what we call fracking. Overnight, this method
of extraction basically gave the United States centuries worth of oil and natural gas. What Suki realized is that he could now make much more money exporting this new fracked gas as
LNG, rather than importing LNG to the U.S. LNG takes up much less space than the gaseous form
of natural gas, meaning it can be delivered more easily over long distances. Suki could put it on a tanker all the way to the United Kingdom, or China, or Japan.
These countries would then turn the LNG back into a gas and burn it to generate electricity.
So Suki was years ahead of everyone else on this,
and the company he founded, Chenier, became enormously successful.
Today, Chenier accounts for about 50% of all liquefied
natural gas exports from the U.S. And since the Russia-Ukraine war sent the world's gas
markets into turmoil, Chenier has made absolutely ridiculous money exporting LNG to Europe.
I was a bit surprised that Suki agreed to speak with me, a climate reporter. But he's extremely confident that what he's doing is right.
Suki himself espouses pretty rational views.
He's told me that climate change is real.
But he's also convinced about LNG as a cornerstone of the world energy system.
Pull LNG out tomorrow, and the whole thing collapses.
Suki's argument goes, well, why wouldn't I sell something
that everyone desperately wants?
Europe needs natural gas before next winter
or people will die.
Countries buy LNG
because they want to stop using coal.
If LNG wasn't available,
maybe countries would try to move
to renewable energy more quickly
despite the costs.
Or maybe they would just keep
burning coal. But the availability of natural gas and the entry of the U.S. into the LNG market
allowed these countries to say, okay, this fuel is cheap and it's being sold by an American company.
We'll buy it from them. I wanted to dig into how private actors like Sharif Suki,
who seem to be controlling the transition from coal to renewables, are setting a de facto energy policy, and therefore climate policy,
for the rest of the world. So here's my article,
How One Restauranteur Transformed America's Energy Industry, read by Ron Butler.
Read by Ron Butler.
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If you wanted to tell the story of how the United States became one of the world's largest exporters of fossil fuels, you could start in the Middle Devonian period, around 400 million
years ago, when a warm inland sea, dense with primitive aquatic organisms, covered parts of
the northeastern United States and Appalachia. You could explain that as these creatures lived,
reproduced, and
died, their remains settled on the ocean floor and were compressed beneath layers of sedimentary rock
until eventually they transformed into a gas trapped thousands of feet below what is now
Pennsylvania. Or you could start with the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson.
On June 12, 1994,
Simpson ate dinner with some family members
at an Italian restaurant called Mezzaluna
in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles.
Simpson's mother left her glasses there,
so a waiter from the restaurant, Ron Goldman,
went to Simpson's home to return them.
Shortly after midnight,
Goldman was found dead with Simpson
outside her condo.
In the aftermath of the murders, reporters and photographers descended on Mezzaluna,
followed by buses full of gawking tourists.
People walked in to pester employees for details about Simpson's final evening,
even asking waiters what she ordered for her last supper, apparently rigatoni.
An owner of the
restaurant, a Lebanese-American entrepreneur named Sharif Suki, was disgusted by the media frenzy.
The morbid curiosity, the lack of taste and decency of people was pretty astonishing,
he would say later. He decided to sell Mezzaluna and went on to try his hand at something new.
After some deliberating,
he settled on the oil and gas industry. With a mop of unkempt hair and a penchant for elegant
double-breasted suits, Suki didn't look the part of a Houston wildcatter. He also didn't know
anything about drilling for oil or gas, but he did have a thick Rolodex from his posh Beirut
upbringing, his days as an investment banker,
and his tenure as a restaurateur to the stars.
Why not raise a little money and give it a try?
The infrastructure that moved fossil fuels around
and converted them into energy was unfathomably complex.
But the people in the business did something relatively simple.
They borrowed money, dug up fuel, and tried to sell it.
That didn't sound so hard to Suki.
At the turn of the century,
growth in the American energy sector
had leveled off.
Major oil producers
like ExxonMobil and Chevron
had staked out the Gulf of Mexico
for almost all the oil
and natural gas it could yield.
And there didn't seem to be
an obvious next place to drill,
so there wasn't much new money flowing in.
In fact, some experts and commentators were worried
that the United States would struggle to find enough oil and gas
to meet rising demand.
Buying more oil would be easy enough,
because millions of barrels of crude
moved all around the world every day on tanker ships.
But natural gas was different.
The United States was already importing around one-fifth of its annual consumption,
mostly from Canada, and the pipelines could carry only so much. Unless the United States
could find more gas within its own borders, the price of the fuel would skyrocket.
There is another way to move natural gas around, though. If you cool it down to minus 260
degrees Fahrenheit, it transforms into a liquid. This liquefied natural gas, LNG for short,
takes up about one six hundredth of the space that regular gas does, which means you can load it onto
tanker ships and send it across the ocean. The United States had never had much need to import liquefied natural gas before,
but Suki figured that rising demand
would soon justify the costs.
He had already built a small energy company
called Chenier,
part of an unsuccessful attempt
to find new oil and gas in the Gulf of Mexico,
and he decided to put his chips on LNG.
He called friends from his investment banking days
and pitched them on a solution to America's energy woes,
a gas processing plant that could regasify LNG
as it arrived from countries like Qatar,
then pump it into domestic pipelines.
A lot of people thought he was crazy,
but eventually he found the money.
And it wasn't long before he identified a site
for the $2 billion facility on a swampy
section of the Louisiana-Texas border, not far from a fishing community called Sabine Pass.
The only problem was that he was completely wrong. Around 2007, just as his terminal was
nearing completion, a group of energy moguls made a series of breakthroughs in a new method for extracting gas from deep layers of landlocked shale.
Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, had the potential to unlock enough gas to satisfy
American energy demand for generations and turn the nation into the world's largest
producer of oil and gas.
It also made Suki's import terminal virtually worthless. In his book, The Frackers,
the reporter Gregory Zuckerman later recounted how Suki looked out at the crowd during the
ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Sabine Pass facility, only to see his investors and supporters
staring at their blackberries. They were watching Chenier's stock price plummet in real time.
The only way for Suki to save the investment was to turn the facility around,
reconfiguring it to liquefy the natural gas from fracking and prepare it for shipping.
This was not a matter of flipping a switch.
Condensing natural gas into a liquid is much more complicated and energy-intensive
than converting liquid back to gas.
And retrofitting the terminal required Suki to raise an astonishing $20 billion from bankers and investors,
many of whom had been involved in the first round of financing and hadn't yet recouped their initial investment.
Furthermore, the idea of an export terminal cut against most people's understanding of America's role in the global energy ecosystem.
In the decades since the 1970s oil embargo,
the United States had tried and failed
to achieve energy independence.
It seemed ludicrous to think
that the nation should now hawk natural gas
to other countries
when just a few years earlier
it was scrambling to find enough of it.
This is somebody who enjoys
being on a roller coaster,
one oil analyst told
a Times reporter in 2011,
referring to Suki.
It is more likely to see snow
in New York in July
than to see exports of gas
from LNG terminals
in the United States.
Suki pushed ahead, though,
and soon Chenier's
gargantuan export facility was rising up out of the bayou,
its hulking steel pipeline arrays and rotund storage tanks looming over the swampy water.
Even before its first shipment left,
it was clear that Suki had finally placed the right bet.
Overseas demand for natural gas was only getting stronger
as countries began to shift away from their reliance on coal power.
European countries could get
most of their gas by pipeline from Russia,
but giant Asian economic
powers like China, Japan,
and South Korea needed
another way to import the fuel.
When completed, Chenier's
export facility would be the only such
facility in the mainland United States,
giving Suki an effective monopoly on the market.
In 2013, he became the nation's highest-paid chief executive,
netting an annual compensation of $142 million.
From here on, he told the Houston newspaper at the time,
it's either good or better.
The United States is now one of the largest exporters
of liquefied natural gas,
dominating the global market
alongside countries like Qatar and Australia.
As of April,
the nation was shipping out
around 12 billion cubic feet of
liquefied gas per day, equivalent to the daily gas consumption of Britain. There are now seven
active liquefaction terminals, and as many as a dozen more are in various stages of planning and
construction from Brownsville, Texas to Jacksonville, Florida. The United States has flooded the world with supply, helping to double the global volume of LNG exports
between 2015 and 2019.
Japan and South Korea have built dozens of regasification terminals
over the past decade,
and China has quintupled its natural gas imports
over the same period.
Natural gas has emerged as a kind of Goldilocks fuel
for power generation.
Less polluting than coal, and less disruptive than switching to renewables.
In other words, it's the best of the worst.
Gas is also the most recent arrival to the world's energy markets.
Like its elder siblings, coal and oil,
it forms over tens of millions of years onto the surface of the Earth.
But unlike these
fuels, natural gas is mostly methane, which contains fewer atoms of carbon than the molecules
that make up oil and coal. Burning it releases less carbon dioxide into the air as a result.
To the extent that we replace coal power with gas power, we reduce carbon emissions by about half.
This is already happening in the United States, where power sector emissions fell by about one-third from 2005 to
2019 as a result of coal-to-gas switching, and in China, where a state-led program to phase out coal
has improved air quality in Beijing. In the early 2000s, gas producers and energy-friendly politicians
pointed to the relatively
low carbon profile of gas
as evidence that it could serve
as a bridge fuel
that could fulfill
the world's energy needs
while we transition
from fossil fuels
to renewables
like solar and wind.
Suki makes another moral pitch
for liquefied natural gas,
which is that it can also
displace fuels in the developing world
that pose more immediate health dangers.
People in Africa die from indoor pollution
because they use wood and cardboard to prepare their meals, Suki told me.
There are people in India that die of outdoor pollution.
There, dozens of coal-fired plants operate 24 hours a day,
blackening the skies over New Delhi and Mumbai,
leading to almost 80,000 premature deaths per year,
according to one analysis.
So if you restrain or restrict energy to the people who need it,
you're killing them.
This is a somewhat unorthodox pitch for a fossil fuel tycoon to make.
But Suki has never been an ordinary tycoon.
He is as easy to find in Aspen, Colorado, as he is in Houston. He frequently talks to reporters and is frank
about climate change. In 2012, as ExxonMobil's chief executive, Rex Tillerson, was calling
environmental groups manufacturers of fear about global warming, Suki was declaring his support for
a carbon tax.
As the rest of the world has sought gas
as a substitute for coal,
the American LNG industry
has begun to position itself
as a purveyor of clean energy.
Chenier, for example,
hired one of President Barack Obama's
climate advisors,
Heather Zykle,
to serve on its board of directors.
A former senior vice president
of the company
was a deputy assistant energy secretary in the Obama administration.
Its vice president for public affairs
used to work for Senator Edward J. Markey of Massachusetts,
a noted climate hawk.
One wrinkle in the bridge fuel argument, though,
is that unburned methane itself is also a greenhouse gas.
In fact, during the first 20 years after its release,
it is more than 80 times as powerful as carbon dioxide at warming the climate.
You don't have to be a chemistry professor to understand the conundrum.
If you can get the gas out of the ground and into a power plant without letting it leak,
it releases less carbon than coal or oil.
If you let too much of it escape into the
atmosphere while producing it, though,
you might damage the climate more than if
you just left it in the ground and burned coal
instead.
Methane leaks are possible at almost every
point in the supply chain.
The point of production carries the biggest risk,
when frackers push the gas out of
the ground and shove it into pipelines.
Still, leaks can also happen as the fracked gas travels through hundreds of miles of pipeline on its way to the Gulf of Mexico.
In January, a satellite spotted a large methane plume that seemed to be emanating from a cluster of pipelines in central Louisiana.
There's also the potential for methane to escape at the liquefaction facilities themselves.
There's also the potential for methane to escape at the liquefaction facilities themselves.
An export plant in Louisiana owned by a company called Venture Global leaked almost 100 tons of natural gas over the course of two days in January.
The methane involved had the potential to warm the Earth
roughly as much as 1,000 cars do over an entire year.
Critics also say the facilities pose significant risks
for those who live near them. In June, an export facility in Freeport, Texas, had a
leak that resulted in a vapor cloud of natural gas that exploded in the open air, an accident
that is expected to put the plant out of commission for three months. These vapor cloud explosions
have occurred at a few oil facilities in recent years,
and safety experts have expressed concern
about the potential for even larger blasts
at liquefaction plants.
Suki has been frank about the nastiness of the business
that has made him so wealthy, too.
I wouldn't want an LNG terminal next to my home,
he told Forbes in 2005.
Nevertheless, the growing demand abroad for American gas has driven a rapid expansion of LNG export infrastructure in the United States,
which has rewritten the rules for the global energy marketplace.
For a long time, natural gas was burned close to where it was produced.
But the explosive growth of the LNG industry
has turned the fuel into a commodity like oil,
something that almost every country needs,
but that comes from only a select group.
The countries that control the largest gas reserves
also control whether hundreds of millions of people
can keep their lights on and their furnaces lit.
The geopolitical significance
of this fact has become startlingly clear over the last few months. The Russian invasion of
Ukraine sent global energy markets into turmoil overnight, severing a link between the powerhouse
economies of the West and one of the world's main suppliers of oil and gas. It was easy enough for
countries like Germany and Britain to agree
that they would give up
Russian oil
because they could buy oil
on tankers coming from anywhere.
But finding more gas
was not so simple.
Almost half the continent's supply
came from Russian pipelines,
and European nations
couldn't simply stop burning gas,
not if they wanted
to keep the lights on.
The United States wasted no time in positioning
itself as a kind of white knight for Europe's energy needs. As countries like Germany and Italy
scrambled to find enough gas for next winter, the Biden administration promised to fill about
one-third of the threatened Russian supply. The White House didn't frame this rescue mission in
climate terms, but selling gas to Europe is arguably one of the most significant climate policies enacted by the Biden administration.
The substitute gas would keep European economies from falling back on coal,
but it could also ease the pressure on governments to further build out renewable energy sources like solar and wind.
Back in the United States, meanwhile, it would
make gas companies very wealthy, even as the rapid pace of LNG exports drove up domestic
natural gas prices and raised American energy bills. Even though it was Suki's audacious bet
that helped create the LNG boom, he may not end up benefiting from the crisis brought about by the war in Ukraine.
That's because, at least for the moment, he doesn't actually own a liquefaction facility.
In late 2015, just two months before the first gas shipment left Chenier's plant in Sabine Pass,
the company's board ousted him. The move came at the behest of the activist investor Carl Icahn, who had acquired a 13.8%
stake in the company and thought Suki was taking it in the wrong direction. Suki wanted to use the
proceeds from the first terminal to build another terminal in southwestern Louisiana and expand into
other ventures. Icahn wanted to cut spending and pay dividends. After a 10-hour private session that
Suki was not invited to, the board sided with Icon. Suki retreated to Aspen, but his time in
the wilderness didn't last very long. A few months later, he teamed up with another LNG executive
to found a new company called Tellurian and laid out plans to build an export terminal in southwestern Louisiana,
indeed, on the very same site he had been pitching
while still at Chenier.
He had a new financing scheme in mind,
one that would entail greater risk
but also yield mind-boggling profits.
While Chenier had charged trackers a fee
to turn their gas into liquid,
Suki wanted to start his own fracking operation,
liquefy his own gas,
and sell it directly to overseas buyers.
I felt that there was one more chapter to be written,
Suki told me.
The real business model would be to own the American molecules
and sell them on the global market.
As he searched for financing,
Suki turned himself into an online evangelist for liquefied natural gas,
posting regular updates on YouTube.
Two minutes with Sharif Suki
on supporting our European friends.
These videos have helped attract many of the same retail investors
who poured money into companies like GameStop and AMC,
and who now believed that Tellurian's stock was underpriced
relative to the potential payout.
One video showed Suki flying in a helicopter over Louisiana,
pointing out the vacant field where Tellurian's facility would someday stand.
Getting it up and running was imperative.
Tellurian had a productive fracking operation in the woods of the northern part of the state,
but still no way to bring the gas to market.
Suki still didn't when I met him in early February at Tellurian's office in downtown Houston.
The company has a small space in a building owned by the oil supermajor,
Total Energies, and from the upper story conference room, Suki and I could look out
and see the distant expanse of the Texas City oil complex, a warren of storage tanks and refineries
spewing bright orange flames. Despite all the hurdles Tellurian was facing, Suki had an unflappable air about him
and spoke with the kind of blasé confidence
one might expect from a man accustomed to raising billions of dollars
for long-shot projects.
He was wearing one of his trademark double-breasted suits,
along with a pink tie,
and as he talked, he sometimes removed a retractable ballpoint pen
from his jacket and fidgeted
with its clicker. I wondered why Suki was so determined to get back into the LNG business.
After all, he had already made a fortune, and the industry he started was reaching maturity.
Tellurian was still several years and billions of dollars away from being able to profit off it
again. Why didn't he just stay home in Aspen?
The world is screaming for natural gas, he said, and I would like to be able to deliver natural
gas as soon as possible. There was already an energy shortage in Europe over the winter,
a result of a fast pandemic rebound, and people in Britain were worried about paying their gas bills.
How could he not want to supply them with more fuel?
Moreover, he said,
the emerging countries are going to add two billion people,
and their standards of living are improving all the time.
They're not going to say, I don't want to live like you.
As Suki sees it,
the need to provide the world with energy in the short term
outweighs the long-term demand of acting on carbon
emissions. The world may be facing energy and climate crises, he said, but one is going to
happen this month and the other one is going to happen in 40 years. He added, if you tell somebody
you are going to run out of electricity this month and then you talk to the same person about what's
going to happen in 40 years, they will tell you, what do I care about 40 years from now?
Two weeks later, Russia invaded Ukraine.
The booming American LNG industry rushed in to fill the gap left by Russian gas,
turning its focus from Asia to Europe.
Cargoes that had already left American export facilities bound for Japan or China changed course
and headed
to France and the Netherlands, fetching multiple times the price they would have just days earlier.
A few weeks after the invasion began, the United States and the European Commission
announced a long-term agreement to help Europe free itself from Russian gas,
with American producers promising to supply at least one-third of what Russia had once provided the continent.
Bulgaria, Germany, and Greece all raced to build new import terminals
so they could accept American gas before winter
as Russia cut off gas deliveries to one country after another.
Eventually, Germany was moving to flip on old coal plants.
Just a few months earlier, at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow,
these same European governments had affirmed their intention to give up fossil fuels.
But now they had to shelve those ambitions.
I met Suki again in April in New York, at the downtown offices of a media strategy company.
Suki was taking advantage of the chaos in energy markets
to again make his moral case for sending fracked gas all over the globe.
He was stopping in New York to talk to potential investors
and develop a new media strategy for Tellurian
before he went down to Washington to meet with policymakers and legislators.
We huddled together at a conference table in the lobby.
All of a sudden, Europe has put all of its climate aspiration on the back burner, he told me, reviewing the early events of the war.
Countries like the Czech Republic, Italy, and Romania were warning that they might have to reactivate their shuttered coal plants or extend the lifespans of those that have been scheduled to close.
We're going to need gas, he said, especially if
you're serious about climate issues. He was quick to clarify that this wasn't his concern.
As a company, I couldn't care less about the climate, he said. Of course I care, okay, but my
responsibility is not to care about the climate. My job is to make a product that people need and
sell it to them at the cheapest possible price to me.
This was not going to be very difficult,
provided Suki could finish his new facility.
By the summer,
gas prices in Europe were six times as high as in the United States.
Once Suki's terminal was up and running,
he would be able to reap the entirety of that price differential.
A jaw-dropping arbitrage. Yet again, he would have proved everyone wrong.
Still, the facility in Louisiana would need to export gas for years to pay itself off,
which meant that Tellurian would need to keep fracking more gas to supply it,
and that people around the world would need to keep buying and burning that gas,
dumping more methane
and carbon dioxide
into the atmosphere.
Suki's gamble
depended on the energy transition
moving at a very specific pace,
neither too fast nor too slow.
His customers were countries
that wanted to move away
from the dirtiest fuels,
but weren't ready or willing
to shift toward altogether clean energy.
For as long as the transition moved at this halting pace,
it would be gamblers and tycoons like him who set the course of global climate policy,
selling people the fuels they wanted for as long as they wanted them.
Suki himself might have an exit strategy,
but the industry he created would outlast him,
spraying flames into the night sky for decades to come.
I asked Suki what he thought the long-term trajectory of the LNG boom might be.
The fuel might be necessary right now,
but what about in 20, 30, 40 years?
He was betting that the world wasn't ready to give up fossil fuels.
But someday it would.
And the facilities he built would be effectively useless.
What would happen then?
He smirked and waved his hand, as if to swat the question away.
I'll be dead, he said.
So it won't matter.