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$370 Million Payout

Inside Climate News · May 10, 2026, 8:50 AM

Key takeaways

  • Liquefied natural gas vessels are fueled by their cargo—they’re built specifically to make use of the gas boiling off from their tanks.
  • But Cheniere Energy, the largest U.S. exporter of LNG, requested “alternative fuel” tax credits for that.
  • Yet the Internal Revenue Service approved a $370 million payout to the company, a huge windfall that Phil and Peter predicted in an exclusive investigation earlier this year.

Why this matters: environmental and climate reporting with long-term consequences.

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Liquefied natural gas vessels are fueled by their cargo—they’re built specifically to make use of the gas boiling off from their tanks.

But Cheniere Energy, the largest U.S. exporter of LNG, requested “alternative fuel” tax credits for that. The claim baffled shipping experts, because what Cheniere Energy is doing isn’t, in any real sense, an alternative. It also provides little climate benefit over fueling the vessels with diesel and uses the credit in a way that tax specialists say was never intended.

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