Job Creation Clashes with Environmental Risks at Pipeline Meeting

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is in the final stages of gathering environmental information about the Atlantic Coast Pipeline. The debate comes down to more jobs versus the long-term effects of increased gas drilling.

Concerns about safety and damage to the environment were pitted against a desire for economic development and energy independence during a meeting at Bridgeport High School earlier this week. 

Eighteen people spoke in favor of the proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline project. Fourteen spoke against it.  

 

Safety was on Tom Bond’s mind. The pipeline’s proposed route is about a mile south of his property in Lewis County.

 

“What concerns me about this is that local fire departments are not equipped to take care of a hazard like this,” Bond said.

 

The Atlantic Coast Pipeline, or ACP, would be 42 inches in diameter, carrying 1.5 billion cubic feet of gas per day. Bond says pipelines that big are fairly new in the U.S. Because the ACP will operate at up to 1,440 psi while carrying such a large volume of gas, he says the potential for disaster, should there be an explosion, is not being properly considered. 

 

“The blast radius is supposed to be something like 1,100 feet — about a quarter of a mile. That’s what happens if there’s no ignition. If there’s ignition, then the singe radius goes out to about a mile,” Bond said.

 

Another Lewis County landowner offered a different point of view about safety.

 

David Layton works in the pipeline industry. He says there are more than 2 million miles of pipelines in the U.S.

 

“And they have been proven to be the safest, most effective way to transport our energy needs.”

 

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Meeting attendees listen to a speaker Tuesday, March 24, at Bridgeport High School.

But Layton went on to say that the infrastructure is aging and needs to be upgraded.

 

“If these gas companies want to build new and safer pipelines to carry their product, then we should support them,” he said.

 

Economics

A common theme of the those in favor of the pipeline was its potential positive economic impact. Many said that oil and gas development has allowed more West Virginians to get jobs and stay in the state instead of having to leave after school. 

 

Woody Thrasher started an engineering business in West Virginia 32 years ago.

 

“On a local level, I can tell you at our company this economic development is real,” he said.

 

He says his company, the Thrasher Group, hired 200 hundred people in the past five years. He said that wouldn’t have been possible without the oil and gas industry.

 

“The vast majority of those people are either new graduates from West Virginia University engineering school or Fairmont University engineering school, or they’re people that worked out of state and finally had an opportunity to come back home,” Thrasher said.

 

Fracking Concerns

Several people who live in the fracking fields of Doddridge County said the jobs and energy security the pipeline would bring aren’t worth the cost. Many worried that if the projects come to fruition, there will be an exponential rise in fracking. 

 

Credit Dominion Resources
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“We are at risk 24 hours a day every single day of the year for this industry.”

That’s Doddridge County resident Christina Woods. On top of the ACP, Doddridge residents are concerned about another part of Dominion’s plan: The Supply Header Project. It entails building a 36-inch diameter, 39-mile pipeline from Wetzel through Doddridge and Lewis counties to Harrison County. 

 

The goal is to supply the ACP with shale gas from Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. 

 

“And now, once again, we are being asked to take on more of their risk. We as West Virginians, we deserve better. We deserve better than to be a sacrificial zone for the profit of the extractive industries,” Woods said.

 

Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

The ACP and Supply Header projects are still in the the pre-filing stage of development. FERC Environmental Project Manager Kevin Bowman ran the meeting in Bridgeport. He’s in charge of the environmental review process. 

 

He said Tuesday’s meeting was the last chance for people to give verbal comments during the pre-filing stage of the pipeline projects, but written comments will be taken until April 28. 

 

He said once Dominion formally applies to build the lines, there will be more opportunities for people to give their input. According to the company’s own timeline, that will likely happen in late summer.

 

How to Submit Comments

The Supply Header Project’s docket number is PF15-5.

The Atlantic Coast Pipeline’s docket number is PF15-6. 

•Go to https://ferconline.ferc.gov/ and click on “e-Comment.”

•Mail hand-written or typed comments to: Ms. Kimberly Bose, Secretary
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
888 First Street NE, Room 1A
Washington, D.C. 20426

Public Meetings Scheduled About Interstate Pipeline Project

Members of the public can have their say about a proposed interstate gas pipeline at two meetings next week. 

 

Dominion Resources is exploring a route for the 42-inch, 550-mile Atlantic Coast Pipeline. It would begin in Harrison County and end in North Carolina. The meetings are part of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s environmental review process for the pipeline. 

A meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday, March 23, at Elkins High School. Another is set for 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 24, at Bridgeport High School. 

 

Commission spokeswoman Tamara Young-Allen said the meetings are a way for people to voice their opinions about the project.

 

“We generally provide 3 to 5 minutes for members of the public to express their concerns about the potential environmental impact of this proposal,” she said.

 

Mountain Lakes Preservation Alliance, together with the Greenbrier River Watershed Association will hold an informational meeting about the Atlantic Coast Pipeline at 1 p.m. Saturday, March 28, at the American Legion building in Buckhannon. 

 

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s comment period ends April 28. The Atlantic Coast Pipeline’s docket number is PF15-6. 

 

To submit comments:

  • Go to https://ferconline.ferc.gov/and click on “e-Comment.”
  • Mail hand-written or typed comments to:Ms. Kimberly Bose, Secretary

    Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

    888 First Street NE, Room 1A

    Washington, D.C. 20426

 

Dominion: Pipeline Means $25 Million in Property Taxes

Energy provider Dominion Resources says a proposed pipeline that would deliver natural gas to the Southeast would provide more than $25 million in annual local property taxes.

The Richmond, Virginia-based company said Monday it has provided the property tax estimates to local governments regarding the $5 billion Atlantic Coast Pipeline.

The property taxes range from $8 million in West Virginia to more than $10 million annually in Virginia and $6 million in North Carolina.

Payments may begin as early as 2016. If approved by federal regulators, the pipeline is projected to be in service by late 2018.

The 550-mile pipeline that would run through West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina is a joint venture between Dominion, Duke Energy, Piedmont Natural Gas and AGL Resources.

Dominion Announces Partnership to Build W.Va. Pipeline

Dominion Resources officially announced a new partnership Tuesday that will pump billions of cubic feet of natural gas a day out of West Virginia. That is if a federal regulatory commission approves the project.

The nearly $5 billion project has Dominion Resources teaming up with North Carolina’s Duke Energy and Piedmont Natural Gas as well as Atlanta-based AGL Resources to lay 550 miles of pipeline.

Starting in southern Harrison County, the proposed tract would cross through Lewis, Upshur, Randolph, and Pocahontas counties on its way to Virginia, eventually pumping more than 1.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas each day to Virginia and North Carolina, places where the demand for fuel is growing.

The Atlantic Coast Pipeline, as the project is called, is estimated to create more than 17,000 jobs according to Dominion. About 3,100 of those will be in West Virginia.

Most of them will be temporary construction jobs, but an increase in a demand means an increase in supply which could lead to more jobs on drilling sites.

Leslee McCarty with the Greenbrier Watershed Association says she’s not sure the economic good outweighs the possible environmental bad.

Her organization teamed up with the West Virginia Highlands Conservancy to detail the negative impacts in a fact sheet. It includes things like clear cutting trees through the Monongahela and George Washington National Forests, impacts to the water quality of at least half a dozen rivers and streams and decreases in the property values of nearby homes.

The announcement Tuesday means the company will begin the application process through the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission by studying the environmental, historical, cultural and other impacts. That application process takes 18 months to 2 years, according to Bob Orndorff, Dominion’s managing director for state and local affairs. Then, they’ll have to get permission from the state and municipalities as well as landowners.

Barring any regulatory delays, construction is expected to begin in the summer of 2016 and be completed in 2018. 

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