Nearly 140,000 miles of pipeline stretch across 44 U.S. states today under the Energy Transfer banner. The company estimates that its system moves close to a third of the natural gas and petroleum products consumed in the United States. Three decades ago, that footprint measured roughly 200 miles. The distance between those two figures is, in large part, the story of Kelcy Warren, the company’s co-founder and Executive Chairman of Energy Transfer.
Warren and his business partners, Ray Davis and Ben Cook, launched Energy Transfer in 1996 with a modest East Texas gas-gathering system. Growth came in waves after that, often timed to moments of upheaval elsewhere in the energy sector. A wave of midstream assets was put up for sale after Enron’s collapse in the early 2000s, as rivals retrenched, and Energy Transfer moved to acquire several of them. Texas Utilities Fuel Company’s midstream gas system was added in 2004. The Transwestern Pipeline, which carries natural gas from West Texas to California, followed not long after.
A Two-Decade Run of Acquisitions
The pace didn't slow. Energy Transfer acquired Southern Union in 2011, a deal valued at roughly $9.4 billion, then picked up Sunoco the following year for about $5.3 billion. That second deal carried some personal resonance for Kelcy Warren, whose father spent his career working for a predecessor of that company. Regency Energy Partners joined the portfolio in 2015. SemGroup followed in 2019, and Enable Midstream and Lotus Midstream were added in the years after that.
Scaling to Nearly 140,000 Miles
More recently, Energy Transfer closed a $7.1 billion all-equity acquisition of Crestwood Equity Partners in late 2023, adding processing and transportation assets across the Williston, Delaware and Powder River basins. In mid-2024, the company completed its purchase of WTG Midstream, adding roughly 6,000 miles of gas-gathering pipeline and eight processing plants in the Permian Basin's Midland region. The deal was chronicled in detail by D Magazine as part of its broader look at Warren's build-out of the company. Each acquisition added pieces to a network that now reaches nearly every major U.S. production basin.
What Comes Next
Energy Transfer isn't finished spending. The company has outlined $5.0 billion to $5.5 billion in growth capital expenditures for 2026, alongside projected adjusted EBITDA of $17.3 billion to $17.7 billion. Plans also call for doubling the capacity of its Bethel natural gas storage facility in Texas. It's a pace of reinvestment that traces directly back to the acquisition strategy Kelcy Warren has pursued since Energy Transfer's earliest years: buy well, integrate quickly, and look for the next opportunity before it becomes obvious to everyone else.
That approach has made Energy Transfer, and the Executive Chairman who helped build it, fixtures in industry rankings and acquisition scorecards. The growth curve behind the company today, from 200 miles of East Texas pipeline to a continent-spanning network, remains one of the more striking expansion stories in American energy over the past three decades.
