Showing posts with label Maritime Administration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maritime Administration. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Oppose Offshore LNG: Public Comment Deadline August 22 - Sample Comments Below

CLICK HERE to submit your comments to the federal government opposing Liberty Natural Gas's offshore LNG facility called Port Ambrose.  See below for sample topics and comments opposing the project.  Feel free to use the language and facts and make sure to personalize it.  Share this link with friends and family.

For organizations:  we also have a sample newsletter written below to include in your group's newsletter or online publication.  Please feel free to share!



Template 1: Security

To whom it may concern:

My name is ___________ and I am a resident of ____________.   I am writing to express my opposition to Liberty Natural Gas’s application to create a dangerous LNG port just offshore of the most densely populated metropolitan area in our nation.

In addition to the impacts Port Ambrose will have on the environment, commercial and recreation fishing industries, and the coastal tourism industry, my main concern is the security and safety of region.  Tankers filled with explosive gas just miles offshore would no doubt be recognized as a potential target and threat to national security.  An attack on a floating LNG vessel or port at the entrance to one of the busiest ports in the world would cripple the region and put countless lives in danger. 

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie recognized this threat when he vetoed a previous identical proposal from Liberty Natural Gas saying, “the Liberty project would create a heightened risk in a densely developed region, including potential accidents or sabotage disrupting commerce…” Please heed Governor Christie’s warning and reject Liberty’s application for the safety and security of the region.  I appreciate your time and attention to this matter.

Sincerely,

Template 2: Jobs/Coastal Economy

To whom it may concern:

My name is ___________ and I am a resident of ____________.   I am writing to ask that you reject Liberty Natural Gas’s application to create a hazardous LNG port just offshore of the most densely populated metropolitan area in our nation.

While Liberty Natural Gas claims the Port Ambrose proposal will create thousands of jobs, I believe this to be misleading.  According to Liberty’s application, Port Ambrose would generate only six to 10 permanent land-based jobs after the port’s construction.  I don’t believe putting our environment and coastal economies at risk are worth 6 permanent jobs, four more if the port gets deliveries (which similar ports in Boston haven’t gotten in years, and one just shut down because of inaction).

The coastal economy from Cape May, New Jersey to Montauk, New York is dependent upon a clean, pollution-free ocean.  By building a dirty fossil fuel facility, Liberty Natural Gas will put the recreation and commercial fishing industries as well as the local tourism industry at risk.  For example, the port will exclude commercial and recreational fishermen from high-value ocean areas during both construction and operation.  Also, in the event of a spill, accident, or explosion, there would undoubtedly be effects on the boating, diving, shipping and tourism uses of the ocean.  All of these industries, on top of this Liberty Natural Gas threat, are still struggling to get back on their feet after Superstorm Sandy.

Please don’t let the Long Island South Shore and the Jersey Shore become the next Gulf Coast: riddled with failed fossil fuel facilities and diminishing coastal economies.

Sincerely,

Template 3: Environmental Impacts
To whom it may concern:

My name is ___________ and I am a resident of ____________.   I am writing to express my opposition to Liberty Natural Gas’s application to create the first dirty fossil fuel facility in the New York Bight. 

In addition to land-based environmental implications, security concerns, and economic shortcomings of this project, I oppose Port Ambrose because of the detrimental effects construction and maintenance will have on the marine environment.  First, the creation of the pipeline connecting the port to the existing transcontinental pipeline will dredge up over 20 miles of seafloor that contain critical marine life on which the ecosystem relies.  Additionally, the proposed port would discharge 3.5 million gallons of chemically-treated seawater used for pipe tests back into the water.  With the seawater intake for ballast, potential open loop thermal pollution, closed loop thermal pollution, and the potential for wastewater, stormwater, and accidental or incidental discharges ever-present in addition to dredging and chemical pipe test discharges, the negative impacts on the offshore environment are clear. 

Lastly, I would like to raise the issue of the increasingly intense and frequent storms that the New York Bight is exposed to.  If LNG tankers were offshore when Superstorm Sandy barreled up the Atlantic, devastation from the storm could have been made much worse, considering wave heights offshore reached over 30ft, near the proposed location of the port.  The people of New York and New Jersey need to be exposed to the potential dangers of what an offshore LNG facility in the middle of a Hurricane could mean.

I appreciate your time and attention to this matter, and ask that you reject Liberty’s proposal.

Sincerely,

Template 4: Bait and Switch
To whom it may concern:

My name is ___________ and I am a resident of ____________.   I am writing to express my opposition to Liberty Natural Gas’s application to create the first dirty fossil fuel facility in the New York Bight. 

 Liberty Natural Gas, despite being proposed as an “import” facility, can legally petition the government to switch to exports once it has a license for imports – this bait and switch process wouldn’t trigger any public input, any further review, or any notice.  It is for this reason that I believe Liberty Natural Gas CEO Roger Whelan’s claims and Liberty Natural Gas’s application to be disingenuous.  With the price of natural gas overseas skyrocketing to levels six times higher than prices here, it only makes financial sense that a natural gas company would want this facility to export natural gas.  Liberty switching to exports, or even selling to another company that switches the license to exports, would lead to an increase in local demand for shale gas and ramped-up fracking in the region. 

Our nation is too dependent on fossil fuels and dirty energy instead of focusing on renewable energy sources.  This port, if for imports, would lead to higher gas prices as we would have to compete with higher buyers overseas.  If for exports, which could be easily achieved once a license was secured, this port will surely drive up our gas prices and trigger an explosion of fracking – and the environmental impacts that result therefrom.  Neither use of the port is in the interests of the people of the region.

I appreciate your time and attention to this matter, and ask that you reject Liberty’s proposal.

Sincerely,

Template 5: Energy Costs


To whom it may concern:
My name is ___________ and I am a resident of ____________.   I am writing to express my opposition to Liberty Natural Gas’s Port Ambrose application and to ask you to reject the proposal based on economic reasons.

This port, be it for imports or exports, would raise energy costs in the region.  The price for imported LNG is higher overseas, so If Liberty imports natural gas, they will be paying more for foreign fossil fuels.  To make a profit, they would have to sell the gas in the region at a higher rate.

If the port eventually exports natural gas, as is most likely because of the price tag for LNG overseas,  the demand and therefore price for domestic gas would increase as most of the gas would be shipped overseas.

The bottom line is, if this port is for imports: we don’t need it.  If it is for exports: we don’t want it.

I appreciate your time and attention to this matter.

Sincerely,
___________________

Sample Newsletter Article - August 2013

This past June, the United States Maritime Administration announced that Liberty LNG has again applied to build a Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) facility off the coast of New York and New Jersey.  The project, called “Port Ambrose,” would host massive natural gas tankers and will  lead to an acceleration of hydraulic fracturing in the northeast by opening up a gateway for LNG exports.  This project is the same project previously vetoed by Governor Christie in 2011; it may have a new name, but it is in the same place, and has the same impacts, dangers, and drawbacks. (Clean Ocean Action’s factsheet on the port is attached.)

The proposed location for the LNG port would directly interfere with the proposed New York State offshore wind lease area identified by the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.  Additionally, in the past, LNG ports proposed in the NY/NJ Bight were met with vehement opposition from community and civic organizations, commercial and recreational fishing interests, faith based organizations, conservation and environmental groups, and thousands of concerned members of the public, including New Jersey’s Governor.  For this latest application, the coalition of interests aligned against Liberty LNG has grown.  During the July public hearings, hundreds of concerned citizens filled hearing rooms in Long Beach, New York, and Edison, New Jersey, and the beach in Sea Bright, New Jersey to voice their continued opposition to offshore industrialization.

If you are interested in joining thousands of citizens and the Governor of New Jersey in opposing Liberty LNG’s plans to put a hazardous industrial facility just off our beaches,  we ask that you go on the record in opposition of “Port Ambrose” by submitting official “comments” to the federal agency in charge of licensing these ports.  Comments and statements in support of clean ocean uses like fishing and tourism, and in opposition to this specific threat to our region’s economy, security, and environment, will be considered until August 22nd.  Public comments can be submitted online at http://goo.gl/7ye6uh or submitted by mail to the following address: Department of Transportation, Docket Management Facility, West Building, Ground Floor, Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590–0001.

If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to call Clean Ocean Action at 732-872-0111 or email citizens@cleanoceanaction.org.  Thank you for your time and attention to this urgent matter.

Monday, July 1, 2013

Time Out on LNG

ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY SIX ORGANIZATIONS 
ASK FORMORE TIME TO ASSESS PROPOSED LNG PORT


Today, one hundred and thirty six environmental and public advocacy groups sent a letter to the Maritime Administration asking that the public be given more time to consider and comment on a propose liquefied natural gas (LNG) port that would be constructed in the waters off Long Island and the Jersey Shore. After the application was announced on June 14, the project sponsor subsequently released fifteen hundred pages of a four thousand plus page application that federal agencies have found to be still incomplete in more than one hundred and fifty specific areas. Despite the length, technical complexity, and incomplete nature of the material, the public is required to read, analyze and meaningfully comment on the application by July 23.

Sean Dixon, Coastal Policy Attorney at Clean Ocean Action said, “This LNG port will adversely impact the economies and ecologies depended upon by millions of Americans and the public deserves the opportunity to give it careful consideration.”  Dixon noted that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie vetoed this proposal in 2011 (and reaffirmed it in 2012) because, according to the Governor’s original veto (attached to this press release), it “ would present unacceptable and substantial risks to the State’s residents, natural resources, economy and security… stifle investment in renewable energy technologies by increasing our reliance on foreign sources… [and] create a heightened risk in a densely developed region, including potential accidents or sabotage disrupting commerce in the Port of New York and New Jersey.” Dixon notes that “this application is for the same port that was wrong for the people and economies of New York and New Jersey last year, and the year before that; Liberty may be back, but nothing has changed.”

Bruce Ferguson of Catskill Citizens for Safe Energy is concerned that construction of an LNG terminal could lead to increased shale gas extraction, or “fracking”. “I’m well aware that the sponsor says that the proposed port will be used to import LNG from abroad, but there is nothing in the law that can prevent the sponsor, or a future owner of the port, from using it to ship fracked shale gas to Europe and Asia.” Ferguson also noted that the United States will soon become a net exporter of natural gas and that existing import facilities are being revamped to handle exports.

The Maritime Administration has scheduled just two public hearings on the proposal, the minimum allowed by law:

New York State
Tuesday, July 9
Open House: 4:30pm - 5:30pm
Hearing: 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Allegria Hotel
80 West Broadway, Long Beach, NY
(516) 889-1300

New Jersey
Wednesday, July 10
Open House: 4:30pm - 5:30pm
Hearing: 6:00pm - 8:00pm
NJ Convention and Exposition Center
97 Sunfield Avenue, Edison, NJ
(732) 417-1400

Clean Ocean Action is also hosting a “Citizens” Hearing – open to all – the next day, on July 11:

Citizens’ Hearing
Thursday, July 11
Rally Against LNG: 4:30pm - 5:30pm
Hearing: 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Sea Bright, NJ,  Public Beach
(732) 872-011

“Residents of the entire region have grave concerns over this proposed LNG port that could easily be converted to facilitate gas exports instead of imports. This likely conversion would increase demand throughout the Northeast for dangerous pipelines and fracking, and disrupt families' lives for hundreds of miles,” said Emily Wurth, Water Program Director at Food & Water Watch. “Residents of many states deserve numerous public hearings to voice their concerns about this ill-advised plan.”



“We are affirming the request for additional public hearings and an extension for the public comment period for the ‘Port Ambrose’ project in the interest of the general public’s health, safety and the rights of the public to comment on this application; this port is a threat to the ocean, marine life, and ecosystems that sustain us all,” said Suzanne Golas, csjp, Director of WATERSPIRIT.  “As the Maritime Administration is charged with ‘meeting the country’s maritime commercial mobility while supporting the national security and protecting the environment,’ we find this request for additional public hearings and an extension for the public comment period clearly within the scope of the Maritime Administration’s responsibility to ensure comprehensive and adequate input from the general public while reviewing this application.”

The 130 organizations that signed on to a letter to the Maritime Administration asking that the public be given more time to consider and comment on a propose liquefied natural gas (LNG) port that would be constructed in the waters off Long Island and the Jersey Shore are as follows:

Matt Smith
350NJ
Lyna Hinkel
350NYC
Ryan Talbott
Allegheny Defense Project
Christopher Huch
Alliance for a Living Ocean (ALO)
Tim Dillingham
American Littoral Society
Sandy Batty
ANJEC
Stephen A. Sanders
Appalachian Citizens' Law Center, Inc.
Don Torino
Bergen County Audubon Society
Karen Feridun
Berks Gas Truth
Kevin Kamps
Beyond Nuclear
Tracy Sides PhD, MPH
Bravely Be
Charlotte Phillips, M.D.
Brooklyn For Peace
Kathy Maher
Bus for Progress
Daniel Morrissey
Capital District Against Fracking
Wes Gillingham
Catskill Mountainkeeper
Bruce Ferguson
Catskills Citizens for Safe Energy
Rose Braz
Center for Biological Diversity
Kenneth Fogarty
Chenango Community Action for Renewable Energy
Allen Johnson
Christian for the Mountains
John Jongen
Citizens' Alliance for a Pristine Perinton (CAPP)
Barbara Warren
Citizens' Environmental Coalition
Joe Levine
Citizens for Water
Nathan Kipnis
Citizens' Greener Evanston
Isaac Silberman-Gorn
City of Binghamton Residents Against Hydrofracking
Cindy Zipf
Clean Ocean Action
Harriet Shugarman
ClimateMama
Vernon Haltom
Coal River Mountain Watch
Martha Cameron
Coalition Against the Rockaway Pipeline
Arthur H. Kopelman, Ph. D.
Coastal Research and Education Society of Long Island
David F. Slottje
Community Enviornmental Defense
Suzy Winkler
Concerned Burlington Neighbors
Jeremy Samuelson
Concerned Citizens of Montauk
Cheryl Cary
Concerned Residents of Madison County
Mina Takahashi
Concerned Residents of Oxford
Edie Ehlert
Crawford Stewardship Project
Fay Muir
Croton Watershed Clean Water Coalition
B. Arrindell
Damascus Citizens for Sustainability
Maya K. van Rossum
Delaware Riverkeeper Network
Deborah Goldberg
Earthjustice Northeast Office
Jennifer Krill
Earthworks
Ken Gale
Eco-Logic, WBAI-FM
Robert Spiegel
Edison Wetlands Association
Doug Couchon
Elmirans and Friends Against Fracking
Doug O'Malley
Environment New Jersey
Eric Whalen
Environment New York
Katherine Nadeau
Environmental Advocates of New York
Heather White
Environmental Working Group
Ted Glick
Essex/Passaic Green Party
John Malizia
Fishermen's Conservation Association
Jimmy Lovgren
Fishermens Dock Co-Op
Jim Walsh
Food & Water Watch
Marc W. McCord
FracDallas
Julia Walsh
Frack Action
Cynthia Carestio
Frack Free Genesee
Shane Davis
Fractivist.com  
Albert Crudo
Friends of Sustainable Sidney
Sheila Cohen
Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County
Josh Fox
Gasland & Gasland Part II
Alan Muller
Green Delaware
Captain Bill Sheehan
Hackensack Riverkeeper
Bo Lipari
Hector Clean Waters
Alma Hasse
Idaho Concerned Area Residents for the Environment
Dan Mundy
Jamaica bay Ecowatchers
Suzanne Tallichet
Kentuckians for the Commonweath
Marcia Halligan
Kickapoo Peace Circle
Rev. Nancy Kasper
Lakeshore Environmental Action
Sally Robinson
League of Women Voters of NY
Toni Zimmer
League of Women Voters of NJ
Shelley DePaul
Lenape Nation of Pennsylvania
Fred Harding
Maiden Rock Concerned Citizens
Margo Pellegrino
Miami2Maine
Capt. Rick Etzel
Montauk Boatman, Inc. (MBI)
David Denenberg
Nassau County
Ida Sanoff
Natural Resources Protective Association (NRPA)
Judy Triechel
Nevada Nuclear Waste Task Force
Glenn A. Arthur
New Jersey Council of Diving Clubs (NJCDC)
David Pringle
New Jersey Environmental Federation
JK Canepa
New York Climate Action Group
Cathleen Breen
New York Public Interest Research Group (NYPIRG)
David Braun
New Yorkers Against Fracking
Julia Somers
NJ Highlands Coalition
Claudia Borecky
North and Central Merrick Civic Association
Deborah A. Mans
NY/NJ Baykeeper
Donna Stein
NYC Friends of Clearwater
Buck Moorhead
NYH20
Patrick Robbins & Kim Fraczek 
Occupy the Pipeline
Janet Keating
Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition
Peter Bergel
Oregon PeaceWorks
Marianne Waldow
OWS Environmental Solidarity
Lawrence Hamm
People's Organization For Progress
Kevin F. Lind
Powder River Basin Resource Council
Randy Hurst
Protect Orange County
Iris Marie Bloom
Protecting Our Waters
Bill Schultz
Raritan RIVERKEEPER
Gordian Raacke
Renewable Energy Long Island
Len Bjorkman
Residents Against Fracking Tioga (RAFT)
Bill Podulka
Residents Opposing Unsafe Shale-Gas Extraction (ROUSE)
Robert Cross
Responsible Drilling Alliance (RDA)
Kate Hudson
Riverkeeper, Inc.
Anna Sears & Nedra Harvey
Rochesterians Concerned About Unsafe Shale-gas Extraction (R-CAUSE)
Carol Barnett & Jordan Kleiman
Rush Citizens Concerned about Hydrofracking
Karen London
SACRED (Sullivan Area Citizens for Responsible Energy Development)
Clare Donohue
Sane Energy Project
Gail Musante
Sanford-Oquaga Area Concerned Citizens (S-OACC)
Britta Wenzel
Save Barnegat Bay
Gerri Wiley
Save the Southern Tier
Sara Hess
Shaleshock
Alice Slater
Shut Down Indian Point Now
Roger Downs
Sierra Club - Atlantic Chapter
Ann I. Aurelio
Sierra Club of Long Island
Jeff Tittel
Sierra Club of New Jersey
Linda Eckstein
Social Action Committee of UUC Glens Falls
Tabitha Tripp
Southern Illinoisans Against Fracturuing our Environment
John Malizia
Staten Island Tuna Club
Pramilla Malick
Stop the Minisink Compressor Station
Mark Pezzati
Stop the Pipeline (STP)
Michael Chojnicki
Sullivan Alliance for Sustainable Development (SASD)
Kathy Russell
SUNY Cortland CGIS Environmentqal Justice Committee
Richie Lee
Surfers' Environmental Alliance
Larry Moriarty
Surfrider Foundation, Central Long Island Chapter
Allison Candelmo
Surfrider Foundation, Jersey Shore Chapter
Nick Lynn
Surfrider Foundation, NYC Chapter
Krissy Halkes
Surfrider Foundation, South Jersey Chapter
Pam Solo
The Civil Society Institute
Bob DeLuca
The Group for the East End
Margaret Wood
The Lakeland Unitarian Universalist
Rachel Davis
The Mothers Project for Sustainable Energy, NJ
Sandra L. Frankel
Town of Brighton
Ling Tsou
United for Action
Suzanne Golas, csjp
WATERSPIRIT
Asha Canalos
We the People Matter
Nada Khader
WESPAC Foundation, Inc.
Eric Justian
West Michigan Jobs Group
Susan Van Dolson
Westchester for Change
Verle Reinicke
Western Organization of  Resource Councils
Jim Gurley
Winona Area Citizens Concerned about Silica Mining (CASM)