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Archive for August, 2016

Advice for PennEast and All NJ Pipeline Opponents On Upcoming DEP Permit Hearings

August 18th, 2016 No comments

Transco and NJ Natural Gas SRL Pipeline Will Set Legal Precedent On Pipeline Reviews

The NJ Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is holding two very important public hearings on wetlands and CAFRA permits and Clean Water Act Section 401 Water Quality Certificates (WQC) for the Transco compressor station on Monday August 22 and the NJ Natural Gas Southern Reliability Link (SLR) pipeline on Wednesday September 7.

Without going into the details here, let me just say that various pipeline opponents will be submitting various comments that make certain scientific and legal attacks on those pipelines.

Many of these arguments will be made to NJ DEP for the first time, including arguments regarding Clean Water Act Section 401 WQC, NJ DEP wetlands permits and compliance with DEP surface water quality standards, and CAFRA permit and consistency with NJ’s federally delegated CZMA – there might even be novel Clean Air Act issues raised.

The applicants Transco and NJ Natural Gas Co. will have to rebut those arguments with scientific and legal arguments of their own.

The DEP will be required to respond to both sets of comments when they make a final decision on the permit (e.g. there are 3 options: approve, deny, or approve with modifications and conditions).

In doing so, the DEP will establish the State of New Jersey’s scientific and legal rationale regarding very critical scientific, regulatory policy and legal issues that will be challenged before the Office of Administrative Law and the Courts (perhaps State and Federal).

Given the novel and precedential nature of these DEP decisions, it is imperative that pipeline opponents make their strongest arguments possible.

If poor quality or legally and/or factually unsubstantiated arguments are made, those weak arguments will be easily dismissed by the gas industry lawyers and DEP permit writers. The DEP will adopt a bullet proof or difficult to challenge permit and WQC rationale.

If that happens, ALL FUTURE PIPELINE CHALLENGES WILL BE IMPACTED NEGATIVELY – as well as the SRL and compressor station.

There’s a lot on the line – you may have held your powder dry to date, but NOW you have skin in the game!

So, let’s hope that those groups who have refrained from making the various Clean Water Act Section 401 WQC and wetlands arguments publicly thus far show up and bring their A game.

I am referring specifically to PennEast opponents and Rethink Energy NJ, who have focused on FERC thus far, as well as groups like Delaware Riverkeeper who has raised and litigated the 401 WQC issue in other states.

Be there and bring your lawyers and consultant experts. Put your analysis in the record. If you fail to do so, it will come back to bite you.

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Hillary Clinton’s White House Transition Chief Cut Dirty Deal on Delaware Watergap Powerline

August 17th, 2016 No comments

All Fracked Up

Salazar Is Pro TPP, Fracking & Cut Dirty Delaware Water Gap Deal

Seems like all the dirty roads lead to New Jersey.

Donald Trump selected Gov. Christie as the head of his Presidential Transition Team.

Now, Hillary Clinton has named former Obama Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar as her head of transition.

The move is a further betrayal, following the selection of “climate disaster” Tim Kaine as Vice President.

The Intercept just posted a critical article, see:

As a senator, Salazar was widely considered a reliable friend to the oil, gas, ranching and mining industries. As interior secretary, he opened the Arctic Ocean for oil drilling, and oversaw the botched response to the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Since returning to the private sector, he has been an ardent supporter of the TPP, while pushing back against curbs on fracking.

In addition to the TPP and fracking issues, we feel compelled to remind readers and NJ Clinton supporters of Salazar’s corrupt history in NJ.

Salazar cut the $60 million dirty deal that allowed the Suquehanna Roseland power line to cross the Delaware River through the Watergap National Recreation Area – we blew the whistle on that, see:

POWER PLAY AT DELAWARE WATER GAP AND APPALACHIAN TRAIL

“Fast Track” Review Masks Pre-Selection of Most Damaging Transmission Route


Washington, DC — Top administration officials have pre-approved a humongous power transmission corridor across some of the most scenic portions of Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area and the Appalachian National Scenic Trail, according to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) which strongly condemned the move.  Yesterday, the Obama administration announced a plan to “fast track” the Roseland Susquehanna Overland Transmission Project, along with six others – a move that PEER charges is a move to bypass proper environmental review designed to protect one of the most scenic areas of the entire national park system.

Announced as a “pilot project” and a boon to jobs, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and other top officials vowed to slash “red tape” to move the transmission corridors rapidly forward on a fast track basis.

“We do not object to fast-tracking projects as long as political appointees follow the laws protecting parks and the environment–but that hasn’t happened here,” stated PEER executive Director Jeff Ruch.  “Using jobs as a pretext is misplaced.  More jobs can be created by protecting parks than by trashing them.”

PEER contends that Secretary Salazar, National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis and other Interior officials have met repeatedly with project proponents, PPL Electric Utilities of Allentown, Pennsylvania (PPL) and Public Service Electric and Gas Company of Newark, New Jersey (PSE&G), and have already approved a route for a new power line that will cut across the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area and the Appalachian National Scenic Trail.  The power line will be strung on 200 foot-tall towers that will permanently impair the scenic values of one of the most beautiful areas in the crowded Northeastern Corridor of the United States.

For at least three years, the NPS has been developing an environmental impact statement (EIS) to consider the PPL/PSE&G proposal, following the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).  The draft EIS is supposed to be announced to the public for comment before the end of 2011. The transmission line will bring power from PPL generating facilities at Berwick, Pennsylvania across the Delaware River and the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area (NRA) to northern New Jersey.

As part of the deal, the draft EIS will NOT consider at least two alternatives that would lessen impacts to the park’s scenery (#6 and #7) but will include at least one alternative (#2B) demanded by the companies that is untenable from a safety perspective.   The Secretary and the Director have unofficially committed to the companies that the NPS will select Alternative 2, the alternative preferred by the companies but which is the most damaging to the resources and scenery of the parks.  In return, the companies have reportedly agreed to pay $60 million for land acquisition and administration inside and near the NRA.  

“This is not ‘fast track,’ it is a short circuit in which political appointees are putting their thumbs on the scale to skew the review process,” Ruch added.   “It is one thing to select an alternative after the conclusion of the NEPA process, but is something else to decide on the alternative before public comment has even begun.”

[for full press release, with links to the supporting documents, see this]
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Anti-Pipeline Activists Target Christie DEP’s Clean Water Act Powers

August 16th, 2016 No comments

Protest At DEP HQ Demands DEP Deny Water Quality Certificate

State Clean Water Act Power To Kill Pipelines Not Federally Preempted

Focus on Governor’s DEP Powers Has Political and Legal Significance

DEP HQ, Trenton - Ironically located at "401" State Street! (8/15/16)

DEP HQ, Trenton – Ironically located at “401” State Street! (8/15/16)

[Update: David O’Reilly of the Philly Inquirer has a good story I just saw that ran the same day as the protest (8/16/16):

[Update – David Levinsky’s Burlington County Times story gets it exactly right and with a great photo!:

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and New Jersey Board of Public Utilities have already approved construction of the compressor station and pipeline, but those approvals are contingent upon the projects obtaining the related environmental permits.

Bill Wolfe, an environmental activist from Bordentown Township, said New York and Connecticut have turned back FERC-approved pipeline projects due to their expected impacts on wetlands and streams.

“This is the first public protest challenging the governor to use his power under the Clean Water Act to reject these projects,” Wolfe said.

Source: William Thomas Cain for the Burlington County Times. John Kocubinski ® North Hanover Towsnhip Committeeman and

Source: William Thomas Cain for the Burlington County Times. John Kocubinski ® North Hanover Towsnhip Committeeman and Fred Fall of People Over Pipelimes (L)

Let’ hope that all the anti-pipeline, fracking, bomb train, and climate activists working so hard across the state can get get together and focus a coordinated campaign on the DEP’s Clean Water Act power. It is a far more winnable fight than FERC-ing off! ~~~ end update]

For the first time in NJ, anti-pipeline activists targeted a little known State power and today protested at the DEP’s Trenton Headquarters, demanding that DEP do its job and deny a “water quality certificate” for the compressor station and NJ Natural Gas Co.’s proposed Southern Reliability Link (SRL) pipeline through the Pinelands.

Very few people understand that the Governor has power under the Clean Water Act to deny water quality approvals and kill pipeline projects. Instead, almost all activists’ efforts and media coverage are focused on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), a far away beltway bureaucracy captured by the energy industry lobbyists and lawyers.

As a result, Governor Christie and his DEP have gotten a pass – DEP Commissioner Martin even misled the legislature on the DEP’s powers by suggesting that they were preempted by FERC. Martin testified to the Assembly Budget Committee on May 24, 2016:

They (FERC) are the overall controlling entity on it at the end of the day. They could over-ride anything we could even do from the State of New Jersey. […]

We can not fight that .. If we did reject a pipeline it would end up in court very quickly.

But today’s event changes all that, and – just like the Governor was pressured to use his power to kill off shore Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) projects – both the politics and the legal issues are reframed and can no longer be dodged by the Gov. or DEP Commissioner.

The protest opens up an important new political and legal front in the pipeline wars, in advance of what is sure to e a controversial public hearing on draft wetlands and water permits next Monday, August 22.

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The Burlington County Times story notes that there will be two public hearings – here are details:

The first hearing will be held Monday at 6 p.m. at the Ramada Inn on Route 206 in Bordentown Township and will concern a wetlands permit sought by Williams Transco, the Oklahoma utility company that is planning to build the compressor station off Route 528 near the New Jersey Turnpike.

The second hearing is Sept. 7 at 6 p.m. at the Ramada and relates to a water permit needed by New Jersey Natural Gas for its proposed Southern Reliability Link pipeline through Chesterfield, North Hanover, Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, and several towns in Monmouth and Ocean counties.

Responding to activist pressure, New York State Governor Cuomo recently used his Clean Water Act Section 401 “Water Quality Certificate” power to kill the controversial proposed Constitution pipeline.

Cuomo’s denial was preceded by Connecticut, who used the State’s Clean Water Act power to kill the proposed Islander East pipeline across the Long Island Sound.

The Connecticut denial – made by then Connecticut DEP Commissioner and current EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy – was upheld by federal District Court.  After the pipeline company appealed that District Court decision, the State’s denial was upheld by the US Circuit Court of Appeals.

So there is solid legal precedent to uphold NY’s  more recent denial that NJ DEP can rely on as well.

Climate and anti-pipeline activists have been slow to realize the power -legally and politically – of State Clean Water Act powers to halt controversial pipeline projects.

Although the crowd was small today, activists are well advised to watch this challenge closely and join in focusing their efforts on the DEP WQC powers.

(some of the technical details can be found here and here).

Even if the activists lose this phase of the battle and the Christie DEP approves the WQC and wetlands permits, they are sure to be challenged administratively and then judicially, which will inject significant delays.

Perhaps even more importantly, there is a race for Governor now underway, and it’s only a matter of time before one of the Gubernatorial candidates realizes that a commitment to use his power as Governor to block controversial pipeline battles across the state is a winning political strategy.

NJ has a very long history of examples of exactly this dynamic – where environmental controversies are picked up by a political campaign and resolved via policy change in the next administration.

The protest was sponsor by local activist group People Over Pipelines and with the support of Sierra Club, NJ Chapter.

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Extreme Heat Wave Causes Blackout – Not of the Electric Grid, the News Grid

August 15th, 2016 No comments

Is The State Climatologist Still Alive? Or Was He Kidnapped by Christie?

A Deep Dive Into Journalistic Malpractice

From Hot Air In The Highlands To In Praise of the Grid

NJ State Climatologist, David Robinson

NJ State Climatologist, David Robinson

We repost a link to this and the post below in light of another news blackout of the climate issue during the current extreme weather heat wave.

We add the following material for those that like to get into the weeds like we do:

Finally, ICYMI – The NY Times ran an important climate & regulatory policy story on page 1 on Saturday.

The NY Times story actually explains how the fulcrum of the Obama energy and climate regulatory policy was application of the SOCIAL COSTS OF CARBON, another important climate & energy policy story that’s been blacked out by media, see:

Maybe now that the gray lady has broken the ice, NJ’s intrepid reporters can conjure up the spine to write it, instead of PSEG nuclear subsidy propaganda.

[Update – you can’t make this shit up. Just hours after I wrote the above, the carcass of the Star Ledger (AKA NJ.Com) actually published and prominently featured a story that relied exclusively and cited the Farmer’s Almanac for climate projections![end this post]

Extreme Weather

March 3rd, 2016

Rembrandt - Christ in the Storm on the Lake of Galilee

Rembrandt – Christ in the Storm on the Lake of Galilee (1633)

Well, the deputy walks on hard nails and the preacher rides a mount
But nothing really matters much, it’s doom alone that counts
And the one-eyed undertaker, he blows a futile horn
Come in, she said
I’ll give ya shelter from the storm. ~~~ Bob Dylan, Shelter from the storm (1975 – listen)

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EPA Science Advisory Board Criticizes EPA Fracking Finding On “No Widespread Impacts”

August 13th, 2016 No comments

Rebuke to former EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson’s Testimony to Congress

Dissenting Report Exposes Industry Corruption of Science

NJ DEP Science Board & Drinking Water Institute Similarly Corrupted

Lia JAckson testifies to US Senate at confirmation hearing for EPA Administrator

Lia Jackson testifies to US Senate at confirmation hearing for EPA Administrator

[Update: 8/15/16 – 8:30 pm– I just received a phone call from a reader advising me that Mr. Hal Bozarth, whom I poke fun at below, recently died. My apologies to Mr. Bozarth’s family and friends. I would NOT have written and posted these photos if I had known he recently died. ~~~ end update]

The US EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) just issued an important national Report that criticized EPA’s controversial finding that fracking had not caused widespread impacts to drinking water.

EPA’s June 2015 draft Report on fracking concluded [@ ES-6]:

We did not find evidence that these mechanisms have led to widespread, systemic impacts on drinking water resources in the United States

The EPA SAB questioned and criticized that major EPA finding as not supported by data:

The SAB expresses particular concern regarding the draft Assessment Report’s high-level conclusion on page ES-6 that “We did not find evidence that these mechanisms have led to widespread, systemic impacts on drinking water resources in the United States.” The SAB finds that the EPA did not support quantitatively its conclusion about lack of evidence for widespread, systemic impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources, and did not clearly describe the system(s) of interest (e.g., groundwater, surface water), the scale of impacts (i.e., local or regional), nor the definitions of “systemic” and “widespread”. The SAB observes that the statement has been interpreted by readers and members of the public in many different ways. The SAB concludes that if the EPA retains this conclusion, the EPA should provide quantitative analysis that supports its conclusion that hydraulic fracturing has not led to widespread, systemic impacts on drinking water resources. Most Panel members also conclude that the statement requires clarification and additional explanation (e.g., consider including possible modifying adjectives before the words “widespread, systemic impact” in the statement on page ES-6). The SAB also concludes that the EPA should carefully consider whether to revise the definition of impact as provided in Appendix J of the draft Assessment Report (e.g., discuss what is meant by “any observed change” in the definition of “impact” in Appendix J). Four of the 30 Panel members find that this statement on page ES-6 is acceptable as written, but note that the EPA should have provided a more robust discussion on how it reached this conclusion. Further details regarding these four Panel members’ opinion are noted in Appendix B to this Report.

Criticizing a scientific conclusion for lack of definition of key terms and lack of supporting data is as harsh as it gets – about as bad as calling the Pope The Devil.

For good news coverage, see this Washington Post story:

I want to make three quick comments on the NJ backstory and that highlight the NJ implications.

1. Like many others, we’ve been following this EPA Report from the get go and testified at one of the EPA public hearings in Binghamton, NY back in 2010:

Technically, my only comment on the scope of the EPA study is that it seems like EPA is too narrowly focusing on drinking water impacts of chemicals, and ignoring the massively destructive land use and ecological impacts of thousands of fracking wells. And with current drought conditions, how are DRBC and NY, NJ, and Pennsylvania officials going to allocate reductions among current users that are necessary to account for the 5 million gallons of water needed for each of thousands of fracked gas wells?

Binghamton NY protest (9/13/10)

Binghamton NY protest before EPA hearing (9/13/10)

Our objections to the narrow scope of the research were valid and addressed by EPA, as the recent SAB Report notes (a fact ironically highlighted in the dissenting report, written by energy industry reps – See “Preamble” In Appendix B):

In 2009, the U.S. House of Representatives Fiscal Year 2010 Appropriation Conference Committee requested the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or agency) conduct an assessment on the potential impacts to drinking water from the process of hydraulic fracturing. In responding to that request, EPA assigned to the Office of Research and Development (ORD) the task of developing and executing an assessment that not only examined the process of hydraulic fracturing, but also greatly expanded the scope to include the entire life cycle of oil and natural gas development associated with the use, management and protection of water.

From the beginning, the energy industry has sought to narrow the scope of EPA review and the definition of “fracking” – a big lie we have called out.

Trenton, NJ protest (11/21/11)

Trenton, NJ protest (11/21/11)

2. The SAB Report is a rebuke to former EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, who, long before the EPA June 2015 draft Report whitewash, testified to Congress and said basically the same thing. We criticized that in a June 2011 post:

Congressional Question:

Is there any evidence that fracking can effect aquifers and water supplies?

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson’s response:

There is evidence that it can certainly effect them. I am not aware of any proven case where the fracking process itself has effected water, although there are investigations onging (watch testimony)

By using the weasel worded phrase “fracking itself”, it looks like Jackson has bought into the gas industry’s extremely narrow definition of “fracking”, as limited to the activity that occurs 7,000 feet below the surface. This Orwellian practice defines the problem away.

Jackson’s testimony was denounced by anti-fracking activists and progressives.

and sure amplified by Fox News – Watch: EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson Tells Congress “No Proven Cases Where Fracking Has Affected Water

We don’t forget stuff like that. And we don’t give stuff like that a pass.

[We don’t pull punches and don’t forget this stuff, but the national ENGO’s, friends of Lisa, sure do.

As further proof of that, we note that Sierra Club gave Jackson a pass at the time of this damaging and false testimony (May, 2011) and that they ignored this key EPA finding and spun when the EPA draft fracking report was issued last year. Amazingly, that history did not stop Sierra from issuing another press release this week that praised the SAB for criticizing the core findings of an EPA study they previously favorably spun!. They were for it before they were against it! Hahaha!]

3. The SAB Report included a dissenting Report – a fairly unusual practice.

The dissenting Report was joined by 4 members of the SAB Fracking group. Three (3) of the four (4) dissenters are energy industry representatives (one is an energy consultant). The fourth is an Associate Professor and  petroleum geologist and his University of Missouri Department webpage did not provide a CV (just about the only one of many). I’ve contacted Associate Professor Dr. Shari Dunn-Norman to ask him about his funding sources, but doubt I’ll get a reply.

This is a perfect example of the politicization of science and undue industry influence on science.

[Update: 8/15/16 – I just received a phone call advising me that Mr. Bozarth, whom I poke fun at below, recently died. My apologies to Mr. Bozarth’s family and friends. I would NOT have written and posted these photos if I had known he recently died.]

Closer to home, here in NJ, it illustrates why the chemical industry representatives and private consultants on NJ DEP Science Advisory Board are a problem

It also shows why the recent chemical industry appointment to the Drinking Water Quality Institute is so deeply troubling and why it raises strong conflicts of interest. 

The chemical industry appointment was made quietly by Senate President Sweeney – a corrupt move that the chemical industry could not get openly approved through the legislature for the last 3 years:

Bill Wolfe, director of the New Jersey Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, said the bill would also change how the institute develops risk assessments. He contends those changes could make it more difficult for the institute to adopt tough standards for various chemicals.

“It may not result in a regulatory change, but it is clearly a scientific change,’’ Wolfe told the panel.

Bozarth disputed that notion, saying the changes proposed by the bill are similar to ones already endorsed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

See also this Philadelphia Inquirer story:

[…] Bill Wolfe of NJ PEER said that adding industry to the board would “set up conflicts of interests.”

He also said the bill would change the procedure the institute uses to determine risk, weakening its ability to limit contaminant levels.

“We’re in a very very complex area of science and regulation, and this is a sledge hammer,” he said.

You can see his two blog posts about the measure here.

Hal Bozarth, of the Chemistry Council of New Jersey, supported the legislation. He said that industry and commercial interests were “disenfranchised from participating in a process which affects them greatly.”

Imagine that! Chemical industry lobbyist Hal Bozarth, “The Godfather of NJ Toxics” feels “disenfranchised”!

Hal recently was in the front row at the DWQI and he doesn’t look too “disenfranchised” at DEP either:

chemical industry lobbyists meet with DEP Commissioner Mauriello (2009)

chemical industry lobbyists meet with DEP Commissioner Mauriello (2009)

Come to think of it, Bozarth looks pretty comfortable testifying to the Legislature with his boys from “murderers row”, with oilman & Consigliere Jim Benton looking on:

When the second round of bills was heard in Assemblyman Burzichelli’s Committee, later in March, we warned about the sinister influence of  “murderers row”:

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