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Gold/Mining/Energy : LNG -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dennis Roth who wrote (55)1/30/2004 11:53:23 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 919
 
Chinese LNG terminal planned
neftegaz.ru

30.01.2004 7:13
China National Offshore and Oil Corp plans to build an LNG terminal in the Yangtze River delta to import gas from the Australian gas field its listed unit, CNOOC, is negotiating to buy into. The project will form another piece in China National's ambitious plan to build a pipeline network covering the entire mainland coastline.

This project is expected to compete head-to-head with PetroChina's west-east pipeline, which also targets the prosperous coastal provinces of Zhejiang, Jiangsu and the city of Shanghai, as well as the inland provinces of Anhui, Henan and Shanxi.

Red chip CNOOC, China's dominant oil producer, aims to close a deal this year to buy a 12.5 per cent stake in Western Australia's offshore Gorgon gas project, chief financial officer Mark Qiu Zilei said. A letter of intent was signed in October.
Production is targeted to start between 2008 and 2010, and China National plans to build a terminal to receive and regasify liquefied gas shipped from Gorgon.

Although no partners for the project have been announced, it is believed the company will seek partnerships once the deal is signed.

[Neftegaz.ru]



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (55)2/24/2004 7:30:49 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
Ecology and Environment, Inc. Awarded Contract for Offshore California LNG Import Project Worth $1.56 Million
prnewswire.com

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 23 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Ecology & Environment,
Inc. has been awarded a contract jointly with the U.S. Coast Guard and the
California State Lands Commission to complete an environmental and risk
assessment report for the proposed Cabrillo Port, an offshore liquefied
natural gas (LNG) import project.
The terminal, a floating LNG storage and regasification unit moored
permanently to the ocean floor, will be sited approximately 14 miles offshore
of Oxnard in Ventura County between Santa Barbara and Los Angeles on the
California Coast. Proposed by the Australian firm BHP Billiton LNG
International, Inc., the project also includes both undersea and onshore
pipelines. No comparable LNG facility exists anywhere in the world.
The project is one of several proposed LNG facilities to improve natural
gas supplies to the State of California. The contract is valued at $1.56
million with additional options possible.
Ecology and Environment, Inc. is headquartered in Lancaster, New York, a
suburb of Buffalo. Its common stock is listed on the American Stock Exchange
under the symbol EEI. E & E can be located on the World Wide Web at
ene.com .



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (55)6/24/2004 4:32:10 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
Oxnard opposition reroutes proposed LNG pipeline

Outcry has forced BHP Billiton to change route of pipeline for proposed liquefied natural gas terminal off the coast of Oxnard near Malibu. FERC says federal government, not the states, has regulatory control over LNG terminal approvals.

By Mark Bassett/Special to The Malibu Times

Overwhelming objection to the proposed landfall of a pipeline that would transport liquefied natural gas from a deepwater port off the coast of Ventura County, 14 miles northwest of Malibu's coastline, to Ormond Beach in Oxnard, has resulted in the rerouting of the proposed pipeline further east.

In addition, the U.S. Coast Guard has put on hold review of BHP Billiton's proposed Cabrillo Port project, with a deepwater regasification terminal to be located 14 miles off of the coast of Point Dume, until the company provides more technical and environmental data.

The community of Oxnard, public officials and environmental activists lobbied against the proposed pipeline, concerned about the dangers of a leak from the pipeline.

"The onshore pipeline route has changed in response to comments received at the March scoping meetings," said Kathi Hann, public affairs consultant for BHP Billiton. "BHP Billiton completed responses to all data requests by the end of May. The State Lands Commission also has data requests, and these are presently being addressed."

Hann explained that the onshore pipeline was to run along an existing pipeline to Ormand Beach in the City of Oxnard. After public and official dissent at the March scoping meetings, BHP Billiton consulted with Southern California Gas Company, and relocated the proposed pipeline, which will carry LNG from Cabrillo Port to shore, east of major population areas.

"LNG is an asphyxiant and cryogenic with the potential for catastrophic complications resulting in death," said Susan Jordan, director of California Coastal Protection Network, at a public scoping meeting in Malibu on March 16. "Concerns revolve around the odorization of the gas, earthquake issues for the pipelines, the proximity to the shipping channels and the likelihood of collisions, the proximity to the Pacific Missile Test Range, [and] reliability of moorings in bad weather."

Australian mining giant BHP Billiton has spent $350,000 to sponsor a proposal for a LNG receiving terminal to be moored 14 miles off of the coast near Point Dume. The project would consist of a port with three storage tanks, three-football fields long by three football fields wide that would receive three LNG tanker shipments per week from the Pacific Rim, and distribute 1.5 billion cubic feet of LNG via an ocean floor pipeline. LNG is cooled, compressed natural gas, and at the proposed Cabrillo Port, it would be regasified to its natural state and then transported via the pipeline.

The Malibu City Council unanimously passed a resolution opposing the LNG deepwater port. The resolution set forth that the Malibu City Council send a letter to the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the U.S. Coast Guard strongly opposing the Cabrillo Port project, and to monitor the development of any proposed LNG projects and send letters of opposition to appropriate agencies as necessary.

Cy Oggins, staff environmental scientist for the State Lands Commission, said the data requests that stopped the Cabrillo Port project are a facet of the joint federal and state environmental review process. Originally scheduled for a June release, the draft of the joint Environmental Impact Review and Environmental Impact Study currently being prepared by the U.S. Coast Guard and State Lands Commission will now be available to the public for review later this summer. Part of the Coast Guard's appraisal includes the creation of a risk assessment matrix, which addresses threats of terrorism and catastrophic accidents. When complete, a public hearing will follow, and comments on the draft document will be incorporated into the final environmental report.

In the past 18 months, two LNG projects, one submitted by ConocoPhillips and TransCanada for the coast of Harpswell, Maine, and a Calpine LNG import terminal in Eureka City near San Francisco, were both withdrawn because of overwhelming opposing community sentiment.

However, public outcry might not stop future plans for LNG terminals. The Mobile Register of Alabama reported Sunday that the "Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has issued official orders stating unequivocally that the federal government, not the states, has final say over where new LNG terminals can be built. And, a new bill in the U.S. House seeks to remove decision-making power regarding LNG terminals from the states."

According to the Mobile Register, "Together, the regulatory moves may limit the impact of the intense local opposition that has thwarted a number of LNG proposals in the last two years on the Atlantic, Pacific and Gulf coasts."

As reported in the Los Angeles Times, the Cabrillo Port project is estimated to yield $15 billion in earnings for Australia. The Australian Prime Minister, John Howard, met with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to promote Australian liquefied natural gas and the project. After the closed-door meeting with Schwarzenegger, Howard told reporters the governor made positive comments about the project. However, a Schwarzenegger spokesman would not comment on the governor's opinion of the project.



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (55)6/27/2004 10:01:24 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
Cabrillo Port LNG Homepage
lngsolutions.bhpbilliton.com
Information page
cabrilloport.ene.com



To: Dennis Roth who wrote (55)6/24/2005 8:18:08 AM
From: Dennis Roth  Respond to of 919
 
BHP gets nod from Arnie

24jun05
heraldsun.news.com.au

CALIFORNIA governor Arnold Schwarzenegger today gave a stunning endorsement of BHP Billiton's plan to build a $US4 billion ($5.2 billion) liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal off the coast of Los Angeles.

Schwarzenegger named the BHP Billiton terminal "the safest one for California" out of four proposals.

The governor said he liked BHP Billiton's proposal because the plan involved building a floating platform about 23km off the Oxnard coastline, just north of Los Angeles.

Three other terminal proposals by competing energy companies would be built closer to land and major population centres, with one in the busy port of Long Beach.

"I think the (BHP Billiton) one, for instance, at Oxnard where you build it out approximately 11 or 12 miles off the shore could probably be the most safest one for California," the Austrian-born former actor told a press conference in Alhambra, California.

The BHP Billiton terminal, which involves shipping LNG from Australia to the US west coast terminal, would be a financial boom for the Australian economy if it was eventually approved. It is estimated it would be worth $15 billion in exports for Australia.

Schwarzenegger said he had safety concerns about a competing LNG terminal – proposed by Mitsubishi Corp and ConocoPhilips – to be built at the Long Beach Port, south of Los Angeles.

There are fears the highly combustible terminals could be attacked by terrorists or accidental fires could lead to a major explosion.

Schwarzenegger said BHP Billiton's proposal so far off the coastline made it safer. A final decision about the BHP Billiton terminal was expected towards the end of 2005, but the timeframe became cloudier today by a vote in the US Senate.

The Senate voted to give US federal regulators authority over deciding the location of LNG terminals, despite opposition from state governors, including Schwarzenegger.

He has argued US states should have an equal say in deciding where such projects are built.

However, the Senate voted 52 to 45 today against giving governors power to veto or impose conditions on the terminals.

The Senate bill will give the US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission the final say on where terminals are built.