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More bad gas news

800px-LNG_Tanker_ARCTIC_PRINCESS_vor_Hammerfest_(N)_-_Juni_2015

The LNG tanker Arctic Princess/Joachim Kholer Bremen, Wikimedia Commons

 

While Alaska Gov. Bill Walker and his entourage were in Japan this week riding out an earthquake in a luxury hotel that had to be kept secret for “security reasons,” hopes for an Alaska gas pipeline were being shaken once more back in the cold, dark, 49th state.

First came the sinking of the Trans-Pacific Partnership or TPP as it is called. The TPP was expected to boost markets for liquified natural gas (LNG)  in Asia.  And the Alaska gas line plan of the moment is to pipe gas about 800 miles south from the North Slope of the Brooks Range high in the Alaska Arctic to the Kenai Peninsula, liquefy it, load it on tankers and ship it to Asia.

The Sierra Club feared the TPP could “fast track” U.S. LNG exports, something the environmental group doesn’t want to see happen. It believes “upstream impacts,” ie. the process of getting the gas out of the ground, will increase global warming. 

Strangely enough, the Hillary-Clinton-backing group got exactly the outcome it wanted on this issue from President-elect Donald Trump who Monday announced one of his first acts in office would be to pull the U.S. out of TPP. 

TPP was not a deal maker for a troubled $35 to $65 billion Alaska gasline judged economically iffy, if not worse, in the near term, but TPP might have offered the project a little boost.

Hurdles, hurdles, hurdles

The death of TPP came as bad news, and so, too, the list of new questions the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission sent Alaska LNG, the gas pipeline-company once headed by Exxon-Mobil in cooperation with BP, Conoco-Phillips and the state

The state took over the project this summer after Exxon said it wanted to slow down the march toward permitting. The state said it prefered, instead, to speed up that process. Walker said a slow down would miss the “window” that presented the best opportunity for a major gas sale. Gas experts say there really is no window.

Exxon has a long history in bringing oil and gas projects to market. The state of Alaska has none.  But Walker has hired a former LNG project leader at the cost of more than half a million dollars to get ‘er done.

One of the first things gas line czar Keith Meyer will need to do is respond to a long list of project questions from FERC. With project control transitioning from Exxon to the state, it’s unclear who is to do the work the feds want done as part of a necessary step toward federal permitting for the project.

What follows is a summary of all of this written by Larry Persily, the one-time federal coordinator for the Alaska gas pipeline project under a Democrat president, a one-time deputy commissioner of the Alaska Department of Revenue under a Republic governor, a former reporter and editorial page editor at the now-gone Anchorage Daily News, and the former editor and publisher of the Wrangell Sentinel newspaper.

Persily probably knows more about the gas business than anyone outside of the big-three oil companies. He is today on contract to the Kenai Peninsula Borough, which does have a dog in the gas hunt. The latest gas plan calls for the LNG tanker facility to be built at Nikiski on the Kenai.

In the new world of journalism, the best reporting is being done by people who know what the hell they are talking about. When it comes to gas, Persily is one of those people. And in the new world of journalism, providing transparency while bringing those people into the reporting game appears one way to provide better information.

Here then is his full reportage on the latest from FERC:

FERC sends more comments, questions to Alaska LNG

Requests for more information are stacking up for the environmental review of the Alaska LNG project, with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission adding 96 pages to an earlier 266-page list sent to the project sponsor.

The federal and state regulatory agency questions and comments compiled by FERC now cover 10 of the 12 draft environmental, engineering, design and operations reports — called resource reports — submitted by Alaska LNG this past summer. Commission staff is still working to gather agency comments on reports No. 11 Reliability and Safety and No. 13 Engineering and Design Material. Most of the comments on those technical reports will come from the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

Several of the questions raised in the 96 pages submitted to Alaska LNG on Nov. 16 asked about highway improvements required to accommodate the heavy traffic during construction, and asked for traffic management plans to safely handle the additional burden on Alaska’s limited road system. FERC also wants to know the details of project impact aid to municipalities during construction.

Alaska LNG will need to answer the questions and provide the additional information in its final set of resource reports that would accompany a project application to FERC. “If the information will not be included in the application as indicated by Alaska LNG,” FERC said in its Nov. 16 letter to the project team, “provide a schedule for when it will be filed with FERC or provided to the requesting agency.”

The final reports would provide the base for FERC’s preparation of an environmental impact statement for the $45 billion project of a gas treatment plant on the North Slope, a 62-mile pipeline to bring Point Thompson gas to the treatment plant, an 804-mile pipeline from Prudhoe Bay to Nikiski, and a gas liquefaction plant and marine terminal in the Kenai Peninsula community on Cook Inlet.

The state of Alaska is negotiating with North Slope oil and gas producers ExxonMobil, BP and ConocoPhillips to take over control of the project, which would include taking the lead in finishing the resource reports and submitting an application to FERC. The producer partners earlier this year cited weak market conditions in deciding against spending more money toward a FERC application in 2017, with Alaska Gov. Bill Walker wanting to stick with the original schedule while boosting the state’s ownership share. The state currently holds a 25 percent stake in the project.

“Negotiations are continuing,” Alaska Gasline Development Corp. President Keith Meyer told his board of directors Nov. 10. The state corporation had wanted the parties to sign off on transition agreements by the end of October. Though the state missed its self-designated timeline, “I would say that all things are moving well,” Meyer told the board. “I don’t detect anything that’s going to stop the process.”

Negotiations between the state and producers continue on transition agreements governing technical information collected during the four years of the state-private partnership, confidentiality provisions covering some of the information, and the status of more than 630 acres purchased by the companies in Nikiski for the proposed liquefaction plant and marine terminal. The state was not a party to the land purchases, but would need to show control of the site in its application to FERC.

There is no deadline for an application to FERC. The agency would start work on the EIS after it receives a complete application. At the same time the state is negotiating to take control of the project from the producers, it is looking to see if it can line up financing, customers and partners for the venture.

Questions and comments raised in FERC’s Nov. 16 letter covered resource reports Nos. 3, 5, 6, 7 and 8: fish, wildlife and vegetation; socioeconomics; geological resources; soils; and land use, recreation and aesthetics.

In particular, FERC asked Alaska LNG to provide updated information about the Kenai Spur Highway relocation in Nikiski. The coastal-route highway would need to be relocated inland to make way for construction of the LNG plant and marine terminal and to allow safe movement of materials and plant modules from a waterfront offloading facility to the plant site.

Nikiski residents have been frustrated at the lack of any updates after Alaska LNG released a preliminary map of multiple route options more than a year ago. And because the highway would need to be relocated before the start of construction, the route selection, engineering, land acquisition and building the new highway segment is a time-critical item to prepare for the LNG project.

FERC asked that the final resource reports:

Other questions presented to Alaska LNG on Nov. 16 covered issues on the North Slope, along the pipeline route and in Nikiski:

 

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