Saturday, June 07, 2008

From Nehalem Political Action; LNG Alert

LNG ALERT

*Astoria, OR* The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission(FERC) released itsFinal Environmental Impact Statement(EIS) today which grossly failed toaddress concerns raised by community members, Oregon state agency andOregon's Governor regarding the Bradwood LNG terminal and pipeline.

Governor Kulongoski, Representative Wu and many others had called on FERC to prepare a new Draft EIS given significant changes in the design of the project and new information about its impacts.

FERC, however, not only refused to prepare a new draft EIS, but failed to respond to the most serious concernsraised about the inadequacy of the much-criticized draft EIS.

According to Brent Foster, Executive director of Columbia Riverkeeper, "It is really unbelievable to see FERC essentially dismiss the serious concerns raised not just by the public, but by virtually every State of Oregon agency that reviewed their initial analysis.

The Bush Administration's FERC wants to bury their head in the sand, approve the project and then leave Oregon and Washington to clean up the mess they have created.

"Brett VandenHuevel, attorney for Columbia Riverkeeper, blasted the FERCanalysis. "There are so many gaps in this EIS that FERC should really beembarrassed. They refused to consider in detail the impacts of the Palomar pipeline project that would connect to the NorthernStar LNG terminal andthey said they did not need to consider the actual global warming emissionsof this huge project. They don't take a hard look at impacts to salmon, and they've repeated the same faulty analysis of water quality, air quality, and economic impacts."

Greg Jacob of Oregon Chapter Sierra Club also criticized FERC's lack of analysis of key issues raised by a recent report by Oregon Department ofEnergy which concluded that Oregon does not need LNG. "FERC basicallyrefused to evaluate whether the project is needed, despite GovernorKulongoski's request that they do so and the State's recent report showing that LNG is unnecessary for our state. Oregon should not be forced toaccept a destructive, expensive project when better alternatives are readily available."

Cheryl Johnson, a Clatsop County school librarian and community organizer against LNG, added, "FERC never even pretended to listen to our concerns. They issued a shoddy analysis for this project and didn't account for very basic issues such as inadequate public safety and emergency responseresources. Concerns from community members and the cities of Warrenton and Astoria have fallen on deaf ears at FERC."

Gayle Kiser, president of a Cowlitz County group opposing the terminal and its pipeline, expressed anger at FERC's unwillingness to provide a clearpicture of the project. "The pipeline is proposed to cross our property, and we are appalled that FERC would put us at risk for a project that isclearly not needed. Worse yet, people along the Palomar pipeline areexcluded from this analysis despite the obvious connection between Bradwood and Palomar. We find the FEIS insulting, and we will continue to fight them on every level."

Opponents will file a written response to the FEIS this month.

* *Major issues raised by Governor Kulongoski, State of Oregon agencies andcommunity groups that were not addressed by FERC in the Final EIS include:

*1. Need for LNG*: Despite calls to consider whether or not there was aneed for LNG in Oregon or whether other alternatives could better meetOregon's energy needs, the Final EIS failed to consider whether there was aneed for LNG in Oregon. The Final EIS dismissed the recent report from theOregon Dept. of Energy finding that there was no need for LNG in Oregon andthat LNG was twice the price of other natural gas alternatives and hadsignificantly greater environmental impacts.

*2. Impacts on global warming*: FERC refused to consider the impacts thatthe proposed LNG project would have on global warming as a result of thesignificant carbon emissions and energy use needed to liquefy and ship LNGto Oregon from the Middle East and other foreign countries where itoriginates.

*3. Impacts to salmon: *State agencies from both Oregon and Washington aswell as Native American tribes strongly criticized the draft EIS's failureto adequately consider the impacts of the proposed project on Columbia Rive=rsalmon. The final EIS, however, failed to adequately study or analyze someof the most important impacts to salmon and all but ignored NorthernStar'srecent changes in the proposed project that would seriously increase impact=son salmon.

* **4. Pipeline impacts*: Because NW Natural's proposed 220-mile long Palomarpipeline would send gas from the Bradwood LNG project to theCalifornia-bound pipeline in eastern Oregon, many told FERC they needed toevaluate the impacts of this "connected" or "cumulative" action as requiredby the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). FERC, however, fails toanalyze in detail the impacts of the Palomar pipeline despite the fact itwould rip across hundreds of family farms in the Willamette Valley, crossover 290 streams and rivers, and leave a 40-mile clearcut across Mt. Hood.

*5. Threats to public safety: *Despite the federal governments own studiesshowing that communities such as Astoria could be leveled by a catastrophicfire in the event of an LNG tanker accident or terrorist attack, FERCrefused to provide any specifics about how many people would be killed orinjured in such an event, or evaluate how a city like Astoria, with fewemergency response resources, could cope with an LNG accident.

Posted by Chuck - Nehalem Political Action

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Considering Nehalem Political Action isn't even a real entity, I decry anything they have to say.

Their entire litany, in fact, is bull-crap.

The Palomar Pipeline has no ties to the Bradwood project, except that it MIGHT get built in order to take additional supplies from Bradwood...they'll STILL have to jump through the permitting hoops.

FERC has done their due diligence on the Bradwood project...and Bradwood is doing 10 times what they would have been required to do to mitigate any adverse impacts.

Some of the people against this are getting ridiculous - and it shows

Patrick McGee said...

As are some of the Pro-LNG element, it's affecting both points of view isn't it?

You don't believe, as well, that there could ever be only one side of an issue like this do you?

Anonymous said...

Any less valid that the "Clap Trap" emmenating from couple other local blogs my fellow anonymous twit?

You probly know their names well, if you don't run one of em yourself.