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Sunday, April 3, 2016

Pipeline News


Pipeline News

Kinder Morgan halts Palmetto Pipeline project over Georgia proposed pipeline moriatorium


Dive Brief:

  • Georgia lawmakers have passed a bill to restrict the use of eminent domain for pipeline projects, causing Kinder Morgan to halt work on its Palmetto Pipeline, the Florida Times-Union reports. 
  • The project was designed to transport refined petroleum products from Jacksonville, Fla., to South Carolina.
  • Kinder Morgan announced on its web site that work on the project had been halted because of an "unfavorable action by the Georgia legislature regarding eminent domain authority."

Dive Insight:

Last week, the Atlantic Business Chronicle reported that the bill issuing a temporary moriatorium on pipeline companies' ability to use eminent demand was being sent to Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal (R)'s desk. The legislation was spurred by concerns over the Palmetto Pipeline project, the news outlet reports.

Gov. Deal would have until May 3 to sign it into law. But after that point, the state would establish a commission to study the eminent domain law while temporarily halting the taking of land for pipeline projects.

According to a statement on Kinder Morgan's web site, the company "has suspended further work on the Palmetto Pipeline project, following the unfavorable action by the Georgia legislature regarding eminent domain authority and permitting restrictions for petroleum pipelines. While this legislative action was disappointing, we remain committed to providing customized transportation solutions to our customers."

The system would have moved 167,000 barrels per day, with the new 360-mile pipeline segment running from Belton, S.C., to Jacksonville. The Palmetto line would have intersected with Kinder Morgan's larger Plantation system, which runs from Louisiana to Virginia.

Recommended Reading

The Florida Times-Union: Work on proposed Palmetto Pipeline suspended because of Georgia moratorium, owner says

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Feds reject Jordan Cove LNG terminal


 
on March 11, 2016 at 7:05 PM, updated March 11, 2016 at 7:59 PM
 
In a decision that stunned supporters and critics alike, federal regulators Friday rejected plans for a massive liquefied natural gas export terminal in Coos Bay, saying applicants had not demonstrated any need for the facility.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission denied applications from the Calgary-based energy company Veresen Inc. and its pipeline collaborator, the Williams Partners, to locate the Jordan Cove Energy Project in the Southern Oregon coastal town, as well as a feeder pipeline that would have stretched halfway across the state.

Regulators said they were required to balance the need for any project against any adverse impacts it would have on landowners or the environment. The need for Jordan Cove was based entirely on demand for natural gas from customers in Asia, and with those markets in upheaval, Jordan Cove's backers have yet to demonstrate that the demand exists.

Regulators noted that Veresen and Williams had signed no formal contracts to sell the terminal and pipeline capacity, and had not even held a successful "open-season" process to demonstrate informal interest in the facility.

Jordan Cove site tour Project backers provide a tour of the proposed site for the Jordan Cove LNG terminal in Coos Bay. 

 
Meanwhile, the companies had been unable to negotiate easements with more than 90 percent of 630 landowners along the 232-mile pipeline route, and would have required the widespread use of eminent domain to secure the necessary rights of way. The commissioners noted the landowners' concerns with land devaluation, loss of revenue and harm to business operations, including timber, agriculture and oyster harvesting.

"Because the record does not support a finding that the public benefits of the Pacific Connector Pipeline outweigh the adverse effects on landowners, we deny Pacific Connector's request...to construct and operate the pipeline," the commission's order said. 

Without a pipeline, it was impossible to demonstrate any public benefit to the LNG terminal, so the commission denied that application. too.

Friday's rejection came with a caveat: The two companies are free to reapply in the future, and the commission would consider their plans if they can demonstrate "a market need" for their product.
Rancher objects to pipeline Bill Gow, and rancher southeast of Roseburg, discusses his objections to the Pacific Connector Pipeline. 
 
The decision was a stunner for all involved, from the project's backers to property rights and environmental groups who have fought the plan since it was it first proposed as a gas import facility more than a decade ago.

"Clearly, we are extremely surprised and disappointed by the FERC decision," said Don Althoff, chief executive of Veresen, which has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on the project. "The FERC appears to be concerned that we have not yet demonstrated sufficient commercial support for the projects. We will continue to advance negotiations with customers to address this concern."
The company said Jordan Cove LNG and Pacific Connector will file a request for a rehearing of the decision.

Even Gov. Kate Brown's office received no early word about the rejection. Brown has taken no formal position on the controversial project, though her predecessor had expressed support.
"We are currently reviewing the denial order internally and with the Oregon Department of Justice," a spokesman told The Oregonian/Oregonlive when asked about Brown's reaction.

Opponents, meanwhile, were thrilled. They have fought the project since 2004, when it was proposed as an import facility to supplement what were supposedly dwindling domestic gas supplies.  Backers switched the project to an export facility after North American gas production soared with the advent of hydraulic fracturing.

"This has been 12 years of my life," said Jody McCaffree, a North Bend resident who formed the advocacy group Citizen's Against LNG to take on the. "It gives you a bit of faith that sometimes the people can win with perseverance and hard work, even though you're up against astronomical odds and deep pockets."

"I'm ecstatic," said John Clarke, a landowner in Winston whose rural property was bisected by the pipeline route. "I don't know what to do. Jump in the air?"

The LNG terminal, its 232-mile feeder pipeline and a natural gas-fired power plant were expected to cost some $7.5 billion. Supporters expected thousands of construction jobs, 150 permanent positions and an ongoing flow of taxes and fees to a corner of the state that has been down on its luck for decades.

Building the pipeline would affect nearly 160 miles of private lands and the more than 600 landowners.

A proposal for a separate LNG terminal at the mouth of the Columbia River also hit a new stumbling block last week, when a lawyer for the city of Warrenton denied the Oregon LNG company's application for a permit to build the facility.

Clatsop County has also denied permits for the feeder pipeline proposed to serve that project, which throws into doubt its ability to secure state land use approvals. And the project is mired in a dispute over its lease with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

-- Ted Sickinger
tsickinger@oregonian.com
503-221-8505; @tedsickinger

- Oregonian/Oregon Live reporter Kelly House contributed to this story.

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