Louisiana court scraps Commonwealth LNG permit

By Niina H. Farah, Carlos Anchondo | 10/15/2025 06:45 AM EDT

The ruling effectively blocks construction while state officials study the project’s climate and community impacts.

A rendering of the Commonwealth LNG Project

A rendering of the Commonwealth LNG project is shown. Commonwealth LNG project

A Louisiana court has tossed out a key permit for a massive liquefied natural gas export terminal along the Gulf Coast.

On Friday, Louisiana’s 38th Judicial District Court ordered state environmental regulators to redo their analysis for Commonwealth LNG’s coastal use permit, effectively blocking construction while that work is completed.

The Louisiana Department of Energy and Natural Resources (LDENR) Office of Coastal Management must now reconsider how the project will affect disadvantaged communities already facing pollution from existing fossil fuel projects, along with the indirect and cumulative climate effects of the LNG terminal on the state’s coastline.

Advertisement

The permit will be vacated until the agency “makes a finding that the benefits of this project outweigh the costs to the community,” Judge Penelope Richard wrote in her order.

GET FULL ACCESS