Kinder Morgan's $10.1 billion project backlog positions the pipeline giant to capture surging U.S. natural gas demand from LNG exports and data center power consumption.
Kinder Morgan Inc. is betting $10.1 billion on a structural shift in U.S. energy demand, with its project backlog concentrated on natural gas infrastructure to serve growing LNG exports and electricity consumption from data centers.
"KMI's asset base is uniquely positioned to support LNG export growth along the Gulf Coast, particularly at the Texas and Louisiana hubs," said Jeremy Tonet, an analyst at JPMorgan who covers the midstream sector. "The backlog reflects a multiyear demand cycle that extends well beyond typical commodity price swings."
The Houston-based midstream giant transports about 40% of U.S. natural gas across 78,000 miles of pipelines and operates 136 terminals with more than 700 billion cubic feet of working storage capacity. More than 60% of the $10.1 billion project pipeline is directed toward power generation and utility demand, while about 20% targets LNG export infrastructure.
The backlog signals that Kinder Morgan expects the U.S. natural gas demand growth story to persist for years. Data center expansion, coal-fired power plant retirements, industrial reshoring and population migration to the Southern U.S. are all driving electricity consumption higher, boosting the need for gas-fired generation. If realized, the projects could convert these structural trends into predictable cash flows.
The company's infrastructure is concentrated in regions that serve as gateways for LNG exports. The Gulf Coast, where Kinder Morgan operates extensive pipeline and storage networks, is home to multiple LNG export terminals that are expanding capacity to meet global demand. The U.S. is on track to become the world's largest LNG exporter, and midstream companies with existing infrastructure hold a competitive advantage over new entrants.
The rise of artificial intelligence and cloud computing has added a new demand driver. Data centers require massive amounts of electricity, and natural gas has emerged as the primary fuel source for new power generation capacity in the U.S., given the slow pace of renewable energy interconnection and the retirement of coal plants. The Edison Electric Institute estimates that data center electricity consumption could more than double by 2030, creating sustained demand for gas-fired power.
Kinder Morgan's business model provides downside protection. The company operates under long-term, fee-based contracts that generate stable cash flows regardless of short-term commodity price fluctuations. This structure allows the company to finance its $10.1 billion backlog with predictable revenue streams, reducing execution risk for investors.
The last time Kinder Morgan reported a backlog of this magnitude was in 2014, when the shale boom drove a wave of pipeline construction across the Permian Basin and Marcellus Shale. That cycle added roughly 15% to the company's EBITDA over the following three years, according to company filings. The current backlog is more diversified, with exposure to LNG exports and power generation rather than just upstream production growth.
Other midstream companies are pursuing similar strategies. Enbridge Inc. is expanding its natural gas storage facilities to capture data center demand, while Venture Global, one of the largest U.S.-based LNG exporters, is developing multiple export projects in Louisiana with a combined target capacity of about 68 million tons per annum.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.