Map showing LNG terminals in India including Ennore Chennai LNG terminal and major operators

List Of LNG Terminals in India: Infrastructure, Capacity, Trends, and Strategic Importance

LNG terminals in India are purpose-built maritime facilities designed to receive large LNG carrier vessels, safely handle cryogenic cargo, and integrate natural gas into the country’s energy system. These terminals form the backbone of India’s rapidly expanding gas economy and are critical to meeting long-term energy security and decarbonisation goals. Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) port terminals are purpose-built maritime facilities designed to receive large LNG carrier vessels, safely handle cryogenic cargo, and integrate gas into a country’s energy system. These terminals form the backbone of India’s rapidly expanding gas economy and are critical to meeting long-term energy security and decarbonisation goals.

India has emerged as one of the fastest-growing LNG import markets in the world, driven by rising demand from power generation, fertilisers, industry, and City Gas Distribution (CGD) networks.


What Is an LNG Terminal?

An LNG terminal is a specialised port facility designed to:

Types of LNG Terminals

  1. Export terminals – linked to gas liquefaction plants and upstream gas fields

  2. Import (regasification) terminals – linked to pipelines, CGD networks, power plants, and industries

  3. FSRU (Floating Storage and Regasification Units) – faster, flexible offshore solutions


India’s LNG Infrastructure at a Glance

  • Operational LNG terminals: 8+

  • Installed regasification capacity: ~52–55 MMTPA

  • Planned capacity by 2030: ~85–90 MMTPA

  • Target gas share in energy mix: 15% by 2030

    LNG Terminals in India: Capacity and Throughput

    The table below presents a consolidated overview of operational and
    planned / under-construction LNG terminals in India, including installed
    regasification capacity and annual LNG throughput up to
    FY 2022–23 (Provisional).

    Operational LNG Terminals in India

    Sl. No.TerminalStatePromoter / OperatorCapacity (MMTPA)
    (as on 31-03-2023)
    2017-182018-192019-202020-212021-222022-23 (P)
    1Dahej LNG TerminalGujaratPetronet LNG Ltd. (PLL)17.5105107102948878
    2Kochi LNG TerminalKeralaPetronet LNG Ltd. (PLL)5.012917182119
    3Hazira LNG TerminalGujaratHazira LNG Pvt. Ltd. (HLPL)5.2598095774737
    4Dabhol LNG TerminalMaharashtraRatnagiri Gas & Power Pvt. Ltd. (GAIL–NTPC JV)5.0657297758539
    5Ennore (Chennai) LNG TerminalTamil NaduIndianOil LNG Pvt. Ltd. (IOLPL)5.0NANA9131413
    6Mundra LNG TerminalGujaratGSPC LNG Ltd. (GLL)5.0NANA30351916

    Planned / Under-Construction LNG Terminals in India

    Sl. No.TerminalStatePromoter / DeveloperPlanned Capacity (MMTPA)Status
    7Dhamra LNG TerminalOdishaAdani LNG Pvt. Ltd.5.0Under Construction
    8Dabhol LNG ExpansionMaharashtraGAIL (Konkan LNG Pvt. Ltd.)3.0Planned
    9Jaigarh LNG Terminal (FSRU)MaharashtraH-Energy4.0Under Development
    10Jafrabad LNG TerminalGujaratSwan Energy5.0Planned
    11Chhara LNG TerminalGujaratHindustan Petroleum LNG (HPLNG)5.0Near Completion

    Source: Compiled from publicly available government and industry data.


Operational LNG & Gas Terminals in India

1. Dahej LNG Terminal – Gujarat

  • Operator: Petronet LNG Ltd

  • Capacity:

    • 15 MMTPA (operational)

    • Expanded to ~17.5 MMTPA

  • India’s largest and busiest LNG terminal

  • Backbone of western India gas supply


2. Hazira LNG Terminal – Gujarat

  • Operator: Shell India

  • Capacity: 5 MMTPA

  • Strategic private-sector terminal

  • Directly supplies western and northern India


3. Kochi LNG Terminal – Kerala

  • Operator: Petronet LNG Ltd

  • Capacity: 5 MMTPA

  • Key terminal for southern India

  • Utilisation improving with pipeline connectivity

To understand how LNG is commercially sold and measured, read our detailed guide on LNG selling units, including MMTPA, MMBtu, SCM, and kg, used across LNG terminals and gas markets.


4. Dabhol (Konkan) LNG Terminal – Maharashtra

  • Operator: Konkan LNG Pvt. Ltd (GAIL-led JV)

  • Current capacity: 5 MMTPA

  • Planned expansion: up to 12 MMTPA

  • Strategically located on the west coast


5. Ennore (Chennai) LNG Terminal – Tamil Nadu

  • Operator: Indian Oil LNG Pvt. Ltd

  • Capacity: 5 MMTPA

  • Supplies Tamil Nadu and southern gas markets

  • Expansion planned to 10 MMTPA


6. Mundra LNG Terminal – Gujarat

  • Operator: GSPC LNG Ltd

  • Capacity: ~5 MMTPA

  • Supports regional gas demand


7. Kakinada FSRU – Andhra Pradesh

  • Operator: GAIL

  • Type: Floating Storage and Regasification Unit

  • Supports eastern and southern gas networks


8. Krishnapatnam FSRU – Andhra Pradesh

  • Type: FSRU-based LNG terminal

  • Designed to support industrial clusters and power plants


9. Bhavnagar CNG Terminal – Gujarat

  • World’s first dedicated CNG marine terminal

  • Enables direct CNG supply via maritime transport

  • A unique Indian innovation in gas logistics


New & Upcoming LNG Terminals in India

Chhara LNG Terminal – Gujarat (HP LNG)

  • Capacity: 5 MMTPA

  • Nearing completion

  • Strengthens western India LNG supply


Dhamra LNG Terminal – Odisha (Adani–Total)

  • Strategic terminal for eastern India

  • Capacity booked by IndianOil

  • Reduces eastern India’s dependence on long pipelines


Jaigarh LNG Terminal – Maharashtra

  • Developer: H-Energy

  • India’s first large-scale FSRU-based LNG terminal

  • Critical for west-coast supply diversification


Swan Energy LNG Terminal – Bhankodar, Gujarat

  • New private-sector LNG infrastructure

  • Supports western India demand


Gangavaram LNG Terminal – Andhra Pradesh

  • Planned terminal

  • Will support industrial and power demand on the East Coast.


Key Capacity Expansions Planned

TerminalExpansion Plan
DahejIncremental debottlenecking
HaziraCapacity enhancement
Ennore5 → 10 MMTPA
DabholCapacity doubling by 2030
Chhara & Jaffrabad~10 MMTPA addition
JaigarhFull FSRU commissioning

Trends Shaping India’s LNG Market

According to industry analysis (Mordor Intelligence):

1. Infrastructure Expansion

  • Rapid build-out of terminals and pipelines

  • Shift toward FSRU for faster commissioning

2. Strategic Partnerships

  • IOC, Adani, GAIL, Petronet partnering with global suppliers

  • Long-term LNG contracts replacing spot purchases

3. Sustainability Focus

  • LNG positioned as transition fuel

  • Emphasis on methane reduction and efficiency

  • LNG terminals being designed hydrogen-ready

4. Regional Balancing

  • Eastern and southern India gaining LNG access

  • Reduced over-dependence on Gujarat


Strategic Importance of LNG Terminals for India

These terminals are critical to:

  • Energy security

  • Industrial growth

  • CGD expansion

  • Power sector fuel switching

  • Reduction of coal and oil dependence

India’s LNG infrastructure enables flexible, scalable, and cleaner energy access across regions.


Major Players in India’s LNG Ecosystem


Conclusion

India’s LNG terminal network is no longer just import infrastructure—it is a strategic energy backbone. With capacity expected to reach ~87 MMTPA by 2030, LNG will play a central role in India’s transition toward a gas-based economy.

As investments, technology, and sustainability converge, India is positioning itself as a major LNG consumer with world-class infrastructure, capable of supporting long-term energy security and economic growth.


Also read

How LNG is processed, stored, regasified, in LCNG Plant to power plants and industries