(By Oil & Gas 360) – Louisiana didn’t just participate in the U.S. natural gas boom. It built the export engine that turned it global.A decade after the first cargo left Sabine Pass, the state is once again at the center of a new phase, one that looks less like a cyclical recovery and more like a structural resurgence of natural gas and LNG in the global energy mix.The numbers alone tell part of the story. U.S. LNG exports have surged from just 0.5 Bcf/d in 2016 to roughly 15 Bcf/d in 2025, making the U.S. the world’s largest exporter, with Louisiana as the primary hub. Louisiana now handles roughly 60%+ of all U.S. LNG shipments, reinforcing its role as the core export gateway.But this isn’t just about growth. It’s about timing. The resurgence is being driven by a convergence of forces that didn’t exist even five years ago.Europe’s need for a reliable gas supply after the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Asia’s steady demand growth, and, more recently, Middle East instability disrupting LNG flows have all elevated U.S. LNG from a marginal supplier to a critical stabilizer in global markets.And Louisiana sits right in the middle of that shift.New projects are accelerating the trend. Venture Global’s Plaquemines LNG facility is already expanding export capacity, now authorized to ship nearly 3.85 Bcf/d. Woodside’s $17.5 billion Louisiana LNG project, the largest foreign investment in the state’s history, signals long-term confidence, with expected production of up to 16.5 million tonnes per year and potential expansion beyond that.These aren’t incremental additions, they’re part of a second wave.The first wave established the U.S. as an exporter. The second wave is scaling it into a dominant, long-term supplier with the capacity to influence pricing, flows, and energy security decisions globally. U.S. LNG export capacity is expected to grow from around 18 Bcf/d today to nearly 29 Bcf/d by the end of the decade.That scale changes the role of natural gas.For years, LNG was framed as a bridge fuel, necessary, but temporary. What’s happening in Louisiana suggests something different. LNG is becoming a core pillar of the global energy system, not just a transitional one.Capital is responding accordingly. Large-scale investments, from infrastructure funds to international buyers, are flowing into Louisiana projects.Long-term offtake agreements, including deals tied to European and Asian utilities, are locking in demand years ahead of first cargo. Even state-backed buyers are stepping in, viewing LNG not as optional, but as essential to energy security.At the same time, upstream activity is following the signal.The Haynesville shale, which feeds many of Louisiana’s LNG terminals, is seeing renewed investment as producers position for sustained export demand. Global players are acquiring U.S. gas assets specifically to secure LNG-linked supply chains, effectively integrating upstream production with downstream export capacity.But the resurgence isn’t without tension.As LNG exports rise, so does scrutiny. Concerns around emissions, local environmental impact, and domestic energy costs are becoming more prominent. Some argue that rising exports could push U.S. natural gas prices higher, tightening domestic supply. Others point to the growing carbon footprint of large-scale LNG infrastructure as a longer-term constraint.Still, those concerns haven’t slowed momentum. If anything, they highlight the scale of what’s happening.Louisiana is no longer just exporting gas, it is exporting influence.In a world where supply disruptions can move markets overnight, LNG from the U.S., and specifically from Louisiana, has become one of the few sources of flexible, scalable energy supply capable of responding in real time.That flexibility is the real story. Oil markets react to shocks. LNG markets are increasingly absorbing them, and Louisiana is where that capability is being built.The resurgence of natural gas here isn’t a rebound from a downturn. It’s a repositioning of gas as a strategic commodity, one that sits at the intersection of energy security, geopolitics, and long-term demand.The first LNG wave made the U.S. an exporter, this one is making Louisiana indispensable.About Oil & Gas 360 Oil & Gas 360 is an energy-focused news and market intelligence platform delivering analysis, industry developments, and capital markets coverage across the global oil and gas sector. The publication provides timely insight for executives, investors, and energy professionals. Disclaimer This opinion article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice. The views expressed are based on publicly available information and market conditions at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice. The post Louisiana LNG: The quiet comeback driving global gas markets appeared first on Oil & Gas 360.