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To: Think4Yourself who wrote (41845)9/22/2005 3:18:55 PM
From: Elroy JetsonRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
It appears there are additional gas pipelines into California.

We can look up these names and see where they come from specifically. The Gas Transmission Northwest Pipeline is the PG&E pipeline from Canada.

Here is the Transwestern Pipeline . crosscountryenergy.com

It appears the El Paso Pipeline is the pipeline rupture you recall on August 19, 2000. tonto.eia.doe.gov
There is a route map of this system on page 2 of this PDF document.

Kern River and the Mojave pipelines move gas within California.

Most of the natural gas used in California comes from out-of-state natural gas basins. In 2003, California customers received 42 percent of their natural gas supply from basins located in the Southwest, 26 percent from Canada, 14 percent from the Rocky Mountains, and 18 percent from basins located within California.

Natural gas from out-of-state production basins is delivered into California via the interstate natural gas pipeline system. The five major interstate pipelines that deliver out-of-state natural gas to California consumers are the Gas Transmission Northwest Pipeline, Kern River Pipeline, Transwestern Pipeline, El Paso Pipeline, and Mojave Pipeline. (Another pipeline, the North Baja Pipeline, takes gas off the El Paso Pipeline at the California/Arizona border, and delivers that gas through California into Mexico.)


cpuc.ca.gov

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