Monday, August 18, 2014

August 8, 2014 PIPELINE PLANS - Randolph County Commission

Pipeline Plans

August 8, 2014
By Lynn Setler - City Editor (lsetler@theintermountain.comInter-Mountain
Photo by Lynn Setler, THe Inter-Mountain
ELKINS - Using a hula hoop as a visual aide, several people spoke in opposition to Dominion Resources' planned 42-inch natural gas transmission pipeline during Thursday's Randolph County Commission meeting.
Dominion Resources plans to send supplies of natural gas produced mostly from the Marcellus Shale formation in the Upper Ohio Valley to North Carolina via its Southeast Reliability Project pipeline system. Dominion claims the final route has not been selected; however, Lauren Ragland - who spoke before the County Commission Thursday - said all of the surveys have been completed and the route will take the pipeline through Randolph and Pocahontas counties.
Ragland, spokesperson for the West Virginia Wilderness Lovers group, told the County Commission Thursday the increased jobs many supporters tout as a benefit of the pipeline project will not materialize. She said welders for the project will be required to have three to five years experience and be in a union. She also cited statistics from Wetzel County, which in 2011 had an 11.9 percent unemployment rate during the height of pipeline construction.
"The situation here is there's no laws for private industry," Ragland said. "The commissioners can beg and ask and the mayors can beg and ask them to hire locals, but the truth is they already have these contracts with out-of-staters. That is something we all need to accept," she said.
Ragland said officials believe the local terrain will require compressor stations every 10 to 20 miles along the pipeline. She said the project would create health hazards, including high-pitched noise produced 24 hours a day by the compressor stations.
Ragland also cited potential air and water pollution and congestion from increased truck traffic as problems inherent in the gas pipeline project. She urged the County Commission to consider passing a resolution urging Dominion representatives to come to Randolph to explain the project and its route through the area.
Wetzel County resident Ed Wade Jr. told commissioners local EMS and law enforcement agencies will be under a tremendous strain if the project goes through. Departments will need to increase their staffing significantly, he said.
"When you take this kind of development and bring it into small rural areas ... you put everybody's life in jeopardy with these large trucks," Wade said. He described some of the trucks as being 14-16 feet wide and 150,000 pounds per load.
Wade explained he had spent many years working in the oil industry in various jobs.
"There are a lot of hazards that come with these pipelines, especially explosions and ruptures," Wade said, showing photos of pipeline installations and pointed out places where flanges are located. "Every one of these has gaskets.
"Gaskets will deteriorate and they leak and the stuff goes into the air," Wade said. He explained that because natural gas is methane and heavier than air, it will not rise and dissipate. Because most local people live in the valleys between hills, Wade said they would be right in the path of the leaking gas, which he described as causing cancer. He said the flow of natural gas through the pipeline would be 1.5 billion cubic feet per day.
Wade said three gas companies want to build pipelines to take gas over the mountains - Dominion, Spectrum and EQT.
"Somebody wants to be first. Things get speeded up, corners get cut and stuff happens," Wade said.
One local resident spoke in favor of the proposed pipeline.
Doug Cooper, of the Mingo area, pointed out our country has tremendous energy needs.
"We've got a great chance to be energy independent with all this natural gas that's been discovered but we've got to get it to where it's supposed to be used," Cooper said.
Cooper said a pipeline is the safest way to transport any gas or liquid. He pointed to the tanker truck that wrecked in Bartow in July as an example. He said it's load went straight into the Greenbrier River.
"There are legitimate environmental concerns that need to be addressed but most of these are during construction," Cooper said. He explained there will be various state and federal agencies monitoring the project.
Cooper pointed out that many of the environmental problems cited by earlier speakers could also be applied to Corridor H construction, such as massive road cuts and runoff. "But they can all be managed," he said.
Cooper said he believed a lot of fear tactics are being used about the pipeline.
"There was far more environmental damage with Corridor H construction than with this pipeline. So I recommend the Randolph County Commission endorse this pipeline plan," Cooper said.
The County Commission thanked the speakers for their presentations, but made no comment on the pipeline project.
- In other action, the Commission approved and signed agreements for a Victims of Crime Act Grant and a grant for the North Central Community Corrections program.
Commissioners approved reappointing Dave Wilmoth, James Davis and Thomas Pritt to the Randolph County Ambulance Authority. They also approved the hiring of Sheldon Vance as a full-time maintenance person for the Courthouse Complex.
Sheriff Mark Brady was given the go-ahead to hire two new deputies. Jonathan Harman and David Pennington will begin work on Aug. 18 and will attend the West Virginia State Police Academy on Sept. 2.
Brady explained this would bring his department to 12 full-time deputies and one part-timer, still leaving one vacancy.

July 20, 2014 - The Intelligencer / Wheeling News-Register

Planned Dominion Pipeline Raises Some Eyebrows

Natural Gas to Run Through West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina

July 20, 2014
By CASEY JUNKINS Staff Writer The Intelligencer / Wheeling News-Register

MOUNDSVILLE - To meet what the company calls an increasing demand for natural gas on the East Coast, Dominion Resources has plans to send supplies of natural gas produced in the Ohio Valley to North Carolina via its Southeast Reliability Project pipeline system.
However, some residents in Pocahontas and Randolph counties in southeastern West Virginia are concerned the proposed 42-inch diameter pipeline will disturb their way of life because of earth moving and the presence of compressor stations.
Dominion spokesman Frank Mack said his company is in the "preliminary stages" of planning the pipelines, which would run through West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina. He said the company is conducting surveys to determine the best possible route to transport natural gas from the local region to the Southeast.

Article Photos

Photo by Casey Junkins

Dominion Resources operates the natural gas liquids storage facility in Belmont County. Dominion plans to build a pipeline to ship Marcellus Shale natural gas for use in North Carolina.
Mack said Dominion has not decided the exact diameter of these proposed pipelines, but concerned residents insist they would be 42 inches.
"The gas will be coming from the Marcellus Shale formation, and producers are drilling mostly in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, but also Ohio," he said. "If approved, we would anticipate project construction in 2017 and 2018, with service to our customers beginning as early as the end of 2018."
Mack said Dominion wants to ship natural gas produced in this region south to meet the needs of some electricity producers that are shifting their fuel sources from coal to gas to meet new U.S. Environmental Protection Agency greenhouse gas standards, while other industrial and residential users also are potential customers.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission must approve Domain's plan once the route is finalized. Mack said the company would also take information from the public, noting the company would seek the best route possible. However, Lauren Ragland, spokeswoman for a group of concerned residents known as "West Virginia Wilderness Lovers," fears that pipeline projects such as Dominion's will disturb the Mountain State's natural beauty, particularly around the Monongahela National Forest.
"Our main concerns are that (the pipelines are) 42 inches. That has to disrupt the land and the mountains," Raglan said. "And it is not just the pipeline - it is the many giant compressor stations.
"This is all happening so fast. We are not anti-pipeline or anti-natural gas. We just want to educate people about what this is really going to do."
Natural gas compressor stations are typically placed at 40- to 100-mile intervals along a pipeline that takes natural gas to market. Compression is required to get the gas to move through the pipeline. The natural gas enters the compressor station via the pipeline that is connected to gathering lines, which are connected to individual gas wells. At the station, the gas is compressed by either a turbine, motor or engine.
In numerous legal advertisements during the past few years, natural gas drillers and processors state that compressor stations have the potential to discharge various amounts of pollutants such as: carbon dioxide; nitrogen oxides; carbon monoxide; methane; and formaldehyde.
"Our quiet peaceful nights with bright stars over the mountains would be destroyed by compression stations every 10-40 miles with two-story turbines roaring 24 hours a day," Ragland said.
However, Mack said Dominion would thoroughly inspect and monitor any pipelines it installs, while performing regular maintenance and cleaning to help prevent any problems.
"Safety and preventive measures are at the core of Dominion's values that are supported by the company's extensive Integrity Management and Damage Prevention programs," Mack said.
FERC approves and regulates the rates and services offered by the pipelines. The design, construction, operation and maintenance of the pipelines, if constructed, would fall under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Transportation's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Hula Hoops & Tall Tales from WV Anti-Drillers Opposed to Pipeline

www.marcellusdrilling.com

Hula Hoops & Tall Tales from WV Anti-Drillers Opposed to Pipeline

I have highlighted the best parts!
Full Story: PIPELINE PLANS  The Inter-Mountain 8-8-14 
by Lynn Setler, Photo by Lynn Setler

We never tire of reading about (and witnessing) stupid antics and statements from antidrillers. Frankly, it amuses us. It doubly amuses us when we point it out and make fun of them in their own absurd behaviors and statements. The latest instance are those opposing new pipelines in West Virginia. At a meeting last Thursday’s Randolph County, WV Commission meeting, one antidriller used a hula hoop, and another made the wild claim that methane causes cancer. All in a day’s work for the anti-drilling ignorant…
A couple of people showed up at last week’s Randolph County Commission 
meeting to complain about plans from Dominion to build a new 450 mile pipeline
from West Virginia through Virginia all the way to North Carolina, hauling Marcellus and Utica Shale gas*.
Using a hula hoop as a visual aid, Lauren Ragland said the proposed Dominion pipeline (called the Southeast Reliability Project) would be about as big as the hula hoop–some 42 inches in diameter. Uh, OK. Thanks for that visual aid Lauren. Ragland is the spokesperson for the West Virginia Wilderness Lovers group. (Who doesn’t love the wilderness?!) She said Dominion shouldn’t build that nasty ole pipeline because welders would be required to have 3-5 years of experience and belong to a union.
Thunk. Ooookkkkaaayyyy….You don’t want the welders to be experienced
and would instead have inexperienced people welding the seams of those pipelines? Apparently. Because, according to Ragland, by using experienced welders that means they will come from out of the areaperhaps (gasp) even out of state. Locals won’t getthose jobs according to Ragland.
After that argument bombed, Ragland then said rumor has it that compressor stations will be needed every 10-20 miles because of the mountainous terrain. And with those 
compressors will come high pitched noise 24/7 from the compressors. And air 
pollution. And truck traffic when they build the pipeline. And, and, and…
Ed Wade, Jr. from Wetzel County also addressed the Randolph County Commissioners. Wade told some pretty tall tales, including this one:
“There are a lot of hazards that come with these pipelines, especially explosions 
and ruptures,” Wade said, showing photos of pipeline installations and pointed 
out places where flanges are located. “Every one of these has gaskets.
“Gaskets will deteriorate and they leak and the stuff goes into the air,” Wade said. 
He explained that because natural gas is methane and heavier than air, it will not 
rise and dissipate. Because most local people live in the valleys between hills, 
Wade said they would be right in the path of the leaking gas, which he described 
as causing cancer.”*
Mr. Wade is factually wrong on many counts. We’ve visited a pipeline location where pipelines are welded together. It’s steel on steel. While it’s true that steel can corrode (over decades), there are no non steel gaskets that we’ve ever seen in the construction of an interstate or local gathering pipeline. On top of that, 
it is a completely false statement that methane causes cancer. It does not 
(look it up in any governmental source of toxic and hazardous information). 
To say that pipelines will leak methane, it will collect in valleys and gradually kill 
people with cancer is a 100% false statement.To read more tall tales from Mr. Wade and hula hoop antics from Ms. Ragland, click the link below.


Elkins (WV) The Inter-Mountain (Aug 8, 2014) 



NOTE : I highlighted the best parts and the ones I will specifically respond to -
 fascinating since are telling the FACTS with industry and government sources including the World Health Organization, Natural Gas.org, Iner sate Natural Gas Association.