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Dundalk
LNG Task Force Begins Work
By David J. Silverman
Capital News Service
BALTIMORE - The delicate balancing act
between the prospect of cutting energy costs on the one hand and
preserving the environment and public safety on the other is
playing out on the rusting industrial shoreline of Sparrows
Point in Eastern Baltimore County.
International energy giant AES Corp. is
proposing a $400 facility to import and process liquefied
natural gas, along with a $250 million pipeline to send the gas
to southern Pennsylvania. The Arlington, Va., based company says
the project could reduce the Mid-Atlantic region's gas costs by
15 to 30 percent. AES says its project offers a host of benefits
to the once thriving industrial area around Dundalk, including
more than 500 union construction jobs and more than $5 million
per year in state and local tax revenue.
But the proposal has triggered fierce
local opposition, prompting the General Assembly to establish a
task force to investigate fears that the development will cause
environmental ruin and be a safety hazard.
"People are concerned," said Sharon
Beazley, coordinator of the LNG Opposition Team leading the
fight against the proposal and co-chair of the task force. "Our
entire issue is based on the health, safety and quality of life
of our people and the Chesapeake Bay."
Opposition to the project among
environmentalists is not unanimous, however. The Chesapeake Bay
Foundation is withholding a judgment on the project.
"We don't support or oppose it right
now," said Beth Lefebvre, a spokeswoman for the foundation.
"There are some legitimate questions but potential impacts still
remain unknown at this time."
The task force, comprising a mix of
government and private sector experts and apprehensive
residents, held its first meeting in Baltimore on Tuesday. It
must submit a report of its findings and recommendations to the
General Assembly no later than Dec. 31.
AES at the end of the year plans to
apply for a certificate from the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, which is expected to decide on the project's fate by
the middle of next year. The terminal, though still being
designed, could be in operation by late 2010, according to AES.
If approved, it would be the second LNG terminal on the
Chesapeake Bay, joining the Cove Point facility in Calvert
County operated by Dominion Resources, Inc. of Richmond.
Opponents have a powerful ally in Gov.
Robert L. Ehrlich, who announced last week he would not extend a
dredging permit on the site. Ehrlich has joined state and local
politicians from Baltimore and Baltimore County in opposing the
project this election year.
Opponents fear that the plant may lead
to further Chesapeake Bay contamination, fires, terrorist
attacks and restriction to waterways long used by local
residents for recreation and livelihood.
The closest population center - the
historic, predominantly black community of Turners Station - is
about 1.3 miles from the proposed site, according to AES. The
surrounding Dundalk and Edgemere area is home to more than
60,000 people.
Ships from overseas carrying liquefied
natural gas - cooled to 260 degrees below zero so that it can be
easily and safely transported - would dock at Sparrows Point and
transfer LNG to an onsite terminal. The LNG would be regasified
and either used in the Baltimore region or pumped northward via
the pipeline.
As U.S. natural gas usage increasingly
outpaces domestic production, AES bills its proposal as an
environmentally-friendly way to blunt soaring energy prices.
Millions of Americans use natural gas each day for heating and
cooking.
Prices in the Mid-Atlantic region are
high in part because natural gas often must be piped to the
region from places as distant as Canada and the Gulf Coast, AES
says. The company contends that bringing foreign shipments to
the Eastern seaboard is an efficient way to circumvent expensive
piping costs.
But the LNG Opposition Team says
importing natural gas is bad policy because it will increase
U.S. dependence on foreign energy.
Although natural gas is non-toxic and
cleaner than many other energy sources, LNG-facility opponents
say its shipment up the Chesapeake Bay and close to civilian
areas is unacceptable.
AES says that the 1.3 mile distance
from the terminal to the nearest population site is enough to
ensure the community's safety. They also note that three LNG
storage tanks in Baltimore, which have been in existence since
the 1970s, stand within a mile of parts of Baltimore's Inner
Harbor, much of the city's business community, M&T Bank Stadium
and Camden Yards.
Of paramount concern to Dundalk
residents is dredging of the bay floor off Dundalk which would
be needed for the project to be built. They say Sparrows Point,
once home to a gigantic steel mill and shipyard, has an
abundance of toxins that would be released into the bay,
precipitating environmental catastrophe.
Ehrlich last week directed the Maryland
Department of Transportation to not extend a dredging permit to
Barletta Willis LLC, which currently maintains a ship repair
yard at the Sparrows Point site. It had been expected that
Barletta Willis would lease its permit to AES so that dredging
could begin.
Ehrlich spokesman Henry Fawell
described the decision as "a big step towards preventing a
liquefied natural gas facility from being put on line." But Zack
Germroth, AES's spokesman for the project, said the governor's
decision is irrelevant because the company needs a separate
dredging permit tailored to the needs of its own project.
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