HOME PAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS, Print Editions, Newsletter PRODUCTS READ THE PETROLEUM NEWS ARCHIVE! ADVERTISING INFORMATION EVENTS

Providing coverage of Alaska and northern Canada's oil and gas industry
September 2017

Vol. 22, No. 36 Week of September 03, 2017

Feds OK gas pipeline fought by residents

Associated Press

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved construction of a high-pressure pipeline that will carry natural gas from the shale fields of Appalachia, across northern Ohio and into Michigan and Canada, a decision likely to be a death blow for project opponents concerned about safety and property rights.

The planned $2 billion NEXUS Gas Transmission project is a partnership between Calgary, Alberta-based Enbridge and Detroit-based DTE Energy. The 255-milelong pipeline will be capable of carrying 1.5 billion cubic feet of gas per day, enough to meet the needs of about 15,000 homes for a year.

The commission Aug. 25 issued a certificate of public necessity and convenience, the project’s last major regulatory hurdle. Despite the opposition, there wasn’t much chance the project wouldn’t be approved as long as the NEXUS partnership was willing to pay for it. The Natural Gas Act of 1938 gives private companies wide latitude to build pipelines in the U.S., and FERC has no known history of disapproving projects like NEXUS.

“Receiving this stamp of approval is a testament to our strong history of consultation and successful project execution,” said NEXUS Gas Transmission President Jim Grech in a statement.

Jon Strong of Medina County’s Guilford Township in northeast Ohio scoffs at the notion that property owners were consulted in any meaningful way. He became one of the leaders of a fight that began with an effort to convince NEXUS and FERC’s staff to move the pipeline south to farmland and away from semi-rural communities like Strong’s and cities like Green in neighboring Summit County. Green officials provided detailed plans for alternate routes that both NEXUS and FERC’s staff rejected as having no advantage over company’s preferred route.

A federal lawsuit filed by opponents against FERC over the approval process was dealt a blow earlier in August when a magistrate wrote that U.S. District Court was the wrong venue for their complaint.

Strong and others refused to allow NEXUS surveyors onto their property, even when they were accompanied by armed sheriff’s deputies. Property owners have no choice now. What’s left for holdouts is negotiating easement rights that preserve what they can of their property and gets them the best possible price for land used by the pipeline.





Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistrubuted.

Petroleum News - Phone: 1-907 522-9469 - Fax: 1-907 522-9583
[email protected] --- http://www.petroleumnews.com ---
S U B S C R I B E

Copyright Petroleum Newspapers of Alaska, LLC (Petroleum News)(PNA)©2013 All rights reserved. The content of this article and web site may not be copied, replaced, distributed, published, displayed or transferred in any form or by any means except with the prior written permission of Petroleum Newspapers of Alaska, LLC (Petroleum News)(PNA). Copyright infringement is a violation of federal law subject to criminal and civil penalties.