Michael Smith at his massive LNG operation on Quintana Island, Texas, which is now shipping out more than 2 percent of the United States’ natural gas production. “It’s my baby,” he says
Image: Matthew Mahon for Forbes
Quintana Island is a seven-mile speck of land off Freeport, Texas. Over the past 200 years, the island has been home to a Mexican fort, then a busy seaport for early Texas farmers, who shipped out cotton. In 1900 came the Great Galveston Hurricane, which killed 11,000 in the immediate vicinity and wiped Quintana clean. By the time Michael S Smith set foot on the island in 2002, it was languishing. “We’d be sinking in the mud if we were standing here then,” Smith says.
Smith has made his own historic mark on the island. Having spent $14 billion, he now owns a controlling interest in Freeport LNG, which chills and exports 2 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day, most of it so-called shale gas, horizontally drilled, hydraulically fracked. At current market prices that daily output is worth some $14 million, on which Freeport collects about $5 million a day in tolling revenue. “We are taking clean American natural gas, adding tremendous value and exporting it to countries that do not have enough energy and would otherwise be burning dirty coal,” he says.
By 2008, the boom in shale gas had made their import terminal dead on arrival