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June 15, 2006 H&N Staff Writer The Pacific Connector Gas Pipeline project's
application was filed with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in April.
If approved, construction would begin in summer 2009, with operation starting
in fall 2010. Besides bolstering Klamath Falls supplies, gas from the new pipeline could
be sent north along the Willamette Valley through the existing pipeline from
Canada. It also could go north through Klamath, Deschutes, Jefferson, Wasco,
Sherman, Gilliam, Morrow and Umatilla counties via the line that now brings
gas from the Rockies. It would provide gas for northwest Nevada, Northern
California and other West Coast sites distributed through utility companies. Pacific Connector officials held an informational meeting Wednesday at the
Running Y Resort. The company must negotiate 75-foot-wide easements with 450
landowners along the route, said Lori Komatar, manager of Pacific Connector's
land group. The amount landowners are paid depends on the land's
use, the amount of land affected, its market value, and how many trees and
crops are impacted. “We need any natural resources we can get,” he said. They're going to
tear up my land, but they'll put it back together.”
By STEVE KADEL
A pipeline that would transport enough natural gas each day to heat 1 million
homes has been proposed from Coos Bay to Malin.
FERC will hold public meetings to take citizen opinion about the project
during the summer. A 30-day period to take written testimony will be announced
soon.
“We need to address each comment,” said Shannon Dunn, FERC assistant
program manager.
The pipeline is needed because supplies from Canadian gas fields are
declining, according to Pacific Connector project manager Steve Potts.
The other supply of gas to Southern Oregon, which comes from the U.S. Rockies,
will be sent to states on the East Coast under pending projects.
The pipeline would provide more than 1,000 jobs during peak construction,
Pacific Connector officials say. The project also would pay about $2 million
in taxes each year to Klamath County.
Many are farmers who will lose one growing season during construction, she
said.
“They'll be paid for the crop that is lost,” Komatar said. “We'll
segregate the topsoil and put it back on top when we're through.”
Chuck Hoy is among the farmers who would be affected. He grows hay and alfalfa
near Keno. Hoy and his wife attended Wednesday's meeting and expressed support
for the pipeline.
Gas in liquid form would arrive at the Coos Bay terminal. It would be
converted back to vapor at the Jordan Cove Energy Project in Coos Bay. Pacific
Connector officials haven't decided where they would purchase the natural gas.
Algeria, Indonesia, Malaysia, Qatar and Trinidad are the leading exporters of
liquefied natural gas.