Energy Transfer Adds a $2.7 Billion Project to Help Fuel Future Dividend Growth


Energy Transfer (NYSE: ET) already pays a lucrative distribution. The master limited partnership’s (MLP) payout is 6.7%, putting it several times higher than the S&P 500‘s dividend yield of 1.2%. Even with that massive yield, the midstream giant aims to grow its distribution by 3% to 5% per year.

It should have plenty of fuel to achieve that plan for the next several years. The MLP is adding to its already robust fuel supply by sanctioning a new $2.7 billion pipeline project.

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Energy Transfer recently announced that it reached a positive final investment decision to build the Hugh Brinson Pipeline, formerly the Warrior Pipeline project. The project will boost natural gas transportation capacity out of the Permian Basin to support growing natural gas demand. The company expects to invest $2.7 billion into the project, which it will build in two phases. It has secured long-term, fee-based commitments from customers to support the project.

Phase 1 of Hugh Brinson will see the company construct a 400-mile pipeline from west Texas to the Dallas-Fort Worth area, where it will connect to Energy Transfer’s vast pipeline and storage infrastructure in that region. Phase 1 will have 1.2 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of capacity and should enter commercial service by the end of 2026. The company will also construct the 42-mile Midland Lateral to connect third-party natural gas processing plants in the Permian Basin to this pipeline.

Phase 2 would see Energy Transfer add compression to increase the pipeline’s capacity to 2.2 Bcf/d. Depending on demand, Energy Transfer could construct Phase 2 at the same time it builds Phase 1.

The large-scale gas pipeline will supply Energy Transfer with an incremental stream of stable cash flow backed by long-term contracts. Meanwhile, it will support growing gas production in the Permian and rising gas demand in Texas from power plants and data centers.

The Hugh Brinson pipeline project adds to Energy Transfer’s growing backlog of organic expansions. The company is on track to invest $2.8 billion to $3 billion in organic capital projects this year. They include expansions of its Nederland export terminal, eight 10-megawatt natural gas-fired electric generation facilities, and a ninth natural gas liquids fractionator at its Mont Belvieu complex, which it recently approved. As with Hugh Brinson, these projects should all enter commercial service through 2026.


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