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Jones Act controversy ignited by waiver on LNG cargo

While modern international-flagged LNG vessels, with their daily hires approaching stratospheric levels, have been grabbing all the attention, a shipment of LNG, aboard a vessel on a short run between the Dominican Republic, is in the spotlight among US shipping professionals.

Barry Parker, New York Freelance Correspondent

October 18, 2022

3 Min Read
LNG carrier
Photo: John Foreman

Over the weekend, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued a waiver of the Jones Act, allowing a cargo of LNG to be transported to Puerto Rico, which is still recovering from the severe Hurricane Fiona that battered the island in late September. The island’s Governor, said, on social media, that: “We requested an expedited approval to ensure continued generation at EcoElectrica plant.” This facility is located near Guayanilla, on Puerto Rico’s south coast.  

The Governor went on to thank the Biden Administration, and especially the DHS Secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, for granting the waiver, which is undertaken in consultation with two other agencies, the US Department of Transportation, and the US Department of Energy.

Though the Governor referred to the vessel transporting gas as a “barge”, chatter on social media suggested that the vessel in question was the tanker “Methane Princess, 138,000 cu m, built 2003, which had been broadcasting an AIS position through early Monday (October 17) at San Pedro de Macoris, along the south coast of the Dominican Republic.

Seatrade_2022LNG_METHANE_PRINCESS2_sourceMARITIME_OPTIMA[83].jpg

Among observers, there was some confusion as to how a Jones Act waiver would apply to what had been described as an inter-island cargo. On Twitter, Cato Institute’s Colin Grabow, a staunch opponent of the Jones Act, had suggested that the cargo had almost certainly originated from an export terminal on the US mainland. US Department of Energy data on individual vessel export loadings is only available through end August, but does show that Methane Princess had loaded US LNG at least once, earlier in the year.

Related:US Jones Act scores for Puerto Rico claims study

The Jones Act, which reserves transport of cargo between the US mainland, and Puerto Rico (a “territory” rather than a state) for vessels, built in US yards/ owned by US citizens/ and crewed by US seafarers, has been highly contentious. Waivers are rarely given; the law firm Holland & Knight, in a blog from last year’s “Hurricane Season” (especially intense during August through October), cautioned that: “Interested stakeholders should be aware of the process for seeking Jones Act waivers and understand that the opportunities for such waivers are narrow – and the window of time in which the waivers are approved is usually temporary and limited.”

The lawyers add that: “However, requests for waivers in instances involving natural disasters (such as hurricanes) have been successful when made on the basis that such waivers connected energy shortages and disruptions with national defense.”

The LNG shipment was actually the second Jones Act waiver granted in the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona, in late September, 2022, a shipment of diesel fuel aboard the product carrier G.H. Parks, 50,000 dwt, built 2009, that had loaded for BP at a refinery in Texas and then waited offshore Puerto Rico until a waiver was granted.

Related:Gunvor seeks Jones Act exemption, objections raised

At that time, eight members of the House of Representatives, had issued a letter to Secretary Mayorkas calling for a one-year waiver of the Jones Act. Two members of the US Senate also chimed in. During the Trump administration, Puerto Rico had received a Jones Act waiver of one week duration, following Hurricane Maria, in 2017.

Reader resources:

https://www.energy.gov/fecm/articles/lng-monthly-2022

https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2021/09/jones-act-waivers-following-natural-disasters

Read more about:

Jones Act

About the Author

Barry Parker

New York Freelance Correspondent

Barry Parker is a New York-based maritime specialist and writer, associated with Seatrade since 1980. His early work was in drybulk chartering, and in the early 1990s he moved into shipping finance where he served as a deal-maker and analyst with a leading maritime merchant bank. Since the late 1990s he has worked for a group of select clients on various maritime projects, also remaining active as a writer.

Barry Parker is the author of an Eco-tanker study for CLSA and a presentation to the Baltic Exchange Freight Market User Group on the arbitrage of tanker FFAs with listed tanker equities.

 

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