The $5.2 billion deal includes the assumption of $2.33 billion of Aethon debt and is expected to close between April and June, pending regulatory approvals.
The agreement, which provides Mitsubishi with natural gas operations across the entire supply chain, from upstream ownership to domestic sales and international exports, was struck between Mitsubishi and existing stakeholders such as Aethon Energy Management, Red Bird Capital Partners, and Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan.
Mitsubishi’s newly acquired assets are mostly located in the Haynesville Shale formation. Aethon had been producing about 15 million tons of liquid natural gas (LNG) annually. The acquisition provides Mitsubishi with increased upstream natural gas production capacity and easy access to the Cameron LNG terminal in Hackberry, Louisiana, a major global LNG export hub with direct access to the nearby deep-water Calcasieu Ship Channel. Mitsubishi already holds a liquefaction capacity contract at Cameron LNG.
While Aethon’s natural gas output is currently sold throughout the South, a portion of its production will be considered for export as LNG to Asia, Japan, and Europe, Mitsubishi said.
“This investment will not only strengthen the earnings base of MC’s natural gas and LNG businesses, but also accelerate efforts to build an integrated value chain in the United States—from upstream gas development to power generation, data center development, chemicals production, and related businesses,” Mitsubishi said in a statement.
Mitsubishi and Aethon said on Jan. 15 that they had formed an alliance to jointly explore additional energy opportunities and projects, including LNG, geothermal energy, and data center and digital infrastructure development.
“We view this alliance as a natural extension of Aethon’s disciplined, long-term approach to building integrated energy platforms,” said Albert Huddleston, Aethon’s founder and CEO.
Mitsubishi’s U.S. energy interests include an upstream partnership with Ovintiv in British Columbia, midstream logistics operations with CIMA Energy of Houston, and power generation through its wholly owned subsidiary Diamond Generating Corporation.
Under the wide-ranging agreement, Japan’s largest importer of liquefied natural gas, JERA, acquired the shale gas interests of South Mansfield E&P in Louisiana for $1.5 billion in October.






