CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 2, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NATURAL GAS EXPORTS WILL RAISE PRICES, AND SOON”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 2, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NATURAL GAS EXPORTS WILL RAISE PRICES, AND SOON”
Because of hydraulic fracturing in
states like North Dakota and Wyoming, Californians and other Americans have
enjoyed lower natural gas prices over the last two winters than anytime in the
last 15 years. That continues right up to this moment.
But if the natural gas industry and
the Obama Administration have anything to say about it, today’s relatively
low-cost heating and cooking may soon be matters of nostalgia.
That’s the meaning of the three
approvals already issued by the Obama-appointed Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) for either building new terminals to export liquefied natural
gas (LNG) or to convert existing import plants to export facilities. More are
likely to be approved soon.
Californians should well remember LNG,
natural gas frozen into a fluid state near its source and then shipped around
the world for use in places that don’t produce their own. The new American
export plants, carrying benign-sounding names like Cove Point and Sabine Pass
and Jordan Cove, aim to send LNG to places like Europe, Japan, Korea, China and
India. They’ve gotten new impetus from ongoing disputes between Ukraine and
Russia, source of most of Europe’s natural gas.
Less than 10 years ago, Californians
were battling over whether and where to put plants for importing LNG, the
result of a decision by the state Public Utilities Commission to give up some
of the state’s reserved space on pipelines bringing gas here from Texas,
Oklahoma and Colorado.
The
answers were no and nowhere. Proposals for plants near Eureka, Oxnard, Long
Beach and Santa Monica all died because companies promoting LNG imports never
proved the state would ever need gas imported by sea. The later discovery of
vast quantities of gas right in California, available if the massive deposits
in the Monterey Shale geologic formation are ever fractured, or fracked, means
California may soon need no imported gas at all.
So this state dodged a financial
bullet, not getting stuck with hyper-expensive LNG.
But prices here will nevertheless rise
because of the export licenses now being handed out for gas the industry has
defined as “surplus.”
This likely fact of life emerges in a
remarkable letter sent to Alaska’s Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski last
fall by a top federal Energy Department official.
Murkowski has pressed for quick
approval of an LNG export facility in her state, warning that “The United
States has a narrowing window of opportunity to join the global gas trade.”
Seeking oil and gas-related profits and
jobs for Alaska, Murkowski never acknowledges the certain effect exports
will have on domestic gas prices, sure to rise if the current surplus goes
overseas.
In California, price effects will
probably be immediate with the opening of planned LNG export plants near Coos
Bay, Ore., and near Prince Rupert on the coast of British Columbia. Both would
take allegedly surplus gas from western Canada fields that now supply
California and the Pacific Northwest.
But FERC doesn’t care, according to
its letter to Murkowski. “We take very seriously the investment-backed
expectations of private parties,” wrote Deputy Assistant Energy Secretary Paula
Grant. Would FERC rescind an export license if domestic gas prices rise
precipitously because of that permit? No, said Grant. “DOE has no record of
having vacated or rescinded an authorization to import or export natural gas
over the objections of the authorization holder.”
The Energy Department is also ignoring
protests by other U.S. industries whose recession recoveries have partly been
fueled by low gas prices.
A group of firms led by Dow Chemical
has demanded that FERC – which works hand-in-glove with the Energy Department –
slow the rush to sell off America’s energy bonanza.
FERC, the companies say, should
“clearly articulate in advance its criteria” for deciding what is in the public
interest.
So far, no response. Which indicates
that even with a majority of commissioners appointed by an allegedly
consumer-oriented Democratic President, FERC is no more responsive to the
interests of utility customers than it was during the energy crunch of 2000-2001,
when Republican George W. Bush was president and the commission refused to stop
predator companies that cheated Californians out of more than $10 billion.
It all assures gas prices here will
rise sharply in the next year or two unless California’s congressional
delegation unites to put the brakes on LNG exports, and soon.
-30-
Elias
is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in
an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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