Published:Tuesday, September 9, 2008 11:29 AM PDT
Serving the South Coast of Oregon

There’s still time to have a voice on LNG
Tuesday, September 9, 2008 11:29 AM PDT

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is a common entity in conversation around town these days. Who hasn’t heard of the president’s hand-picked energy deciders? Anyone thinking about the liquefied natural gas terminal proposed for Coos Bay’s North Spit certainly has.

Who hasn’t read its latest environmental impact study concerning the LNG project and the North Bend-Coos Bay community? Most everyone.

With hundreds of pages of information and analysis, the EIS is a daunting piece of literature. The executive summary, however, is a manageable abbreviation of the study’s key points. It offers average people a chance to understand key issues. Those who want to know more after that can read deep into the monster document.

People in this community concerned with the LNG debate, no matter which side you’re on, should take a look. The documents are available online or in print.

(FYI, these suggestions are neither an endorsement nor an indictment of the project. The World’s editorial board has decided to withhold judgment for now. We think our best contribution — for the time being — is to promote community discussion without taking sides.)

The draft EIS proposes alternatives, from “do nothing” to the full fuel deal. It gives people the opportunity to discuss environmental concerns and the need for better information. That could include concerns on pipeline routes. For example, the feds make clear in the study they prefer not to see the pipeline placed under the bay.

Another key question is the potential impact of the LNG tanks on the North Spit. Example 2: The study concludes the tanks are safe from tsunamis to 50 feet, yet not all of the computer modeling studies are complete.

People who at least familiarize themselves with the study could pose questions that might open the door to better information and even legal challenges if environmental concerns aren’t addressed.

This study is not the only opportunity to become informed as the federal siting process steams into the final months. Jordan Cove Energy Project and Williams, the natural gas pipeline proposer, will offer people a chance to ask in-depth questions at a town hall meeting in North Bend later this month.

The LNG developers’ data is what FERC will use to decide whether North Bend-Coos Bay will get an LNG terminal and whether Oregon will get the pipeline.

Rather than venting emotions at the meeting, people should go to learn. Reading up on the study before arriving would be helpful.

Being informed doesn’t require a PhD. It requires curiosity and the ability to set aside boosterism and/or distrust long enough to contemplate facts and provide meaningful comments.


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