Winter Storm Threatens East Coast? Batten Down the Hatches

quote from truth seeker

I won't say it's not scary, it is. But the times I've decided that I'd had enough of the way certain circumstances were going and trusted that perhaps my life didn't have to feel like one continuous uphill battle after another and tried something, anything different, there seemed to be more of a 'flow' to it if that makes sense. This, of course, doesn't mean that life is easy or that there still isn't a battle being waged on many levels, but it does seem to go a bit more smoothly when we are open to receiving lessons with a bit of faith and sometimes joy. Perhaps this is what is meant by 'Learning is fun'. For what it's worth.

Thank you for reaching out truth seeker, and for the words of encouragement.
 
webglider said:
SNIP

There are several other serious concerns with this proposal not the least of which is that the natural gas from upstate is very high in radon. As the travel time it will take the natural gas to reach NYC kitchens is relatively short, the radon, which is a noble gas, does not have time to decompose to the extent that is needed to be safe, with the result that radon gas will be coming to NYC kitchens through their stoves. As most NYC apartments do not have windows, (I know this because a friend of mine is a kitchen designer), it is expected that the rate of lung cancer will go up significantly.

Because I am on the board of my building, and have explained the issue to the other members, we will not disable the #2 oil burning capacity here.

But how many people in the city are aware of the implications of this change? I think not many.

The pipes are already being laid in heavily populated areas to transport the gas. This adds another danger to living in NYC: gas explosions.
SNIP

The radon is dangerous... also the crazy plans to convert boilers... #2 also is subject to huge price swings!

As for the concern about gas lines, there's already a lot of huge gas lines that criss-cross the city. Some are high pressure lines that feed steam plants and power plants.
 
quote from Divide by Zero:

The radon is dangerous... also the crazy plans to convert boilers... #2 also is subject to huge price swings! c
As for the concern about gas lines, there's already a lot of huge gas lines that criss-cross the city. Some are high pressure lines that feed steam plants and power plants.

Much of the gas that is to be piped down to NYC will be exported. At that time, there will be less gas so the price will rise. Those boilers locked into nat gas will be stuck with it and will have no option but to pay higher prices for nat gas.

The company that is laying the pipeline that is already under construction in the densely populated West Village, is Spectra which has a terrible safety record.

There is a history of safety issues with the builder of this pipeline
http://saneenergyproject.org/overview/

• In June, 2011, DOT Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) inspectors cited Spectra Energy for 17 inadequacies in its pipeline safety operations and procedures, including problems with pipeline surveillance, emergency plans, and welding procedures.

• Texas Eastern, the subsidiary of Spectra Energy that proposes to build the NJ-NY Expansion Project, received the EPA’s seventh highest Federal Penalty Assessment on record (nearly $25 million adjusted for inflation to 2009 numbers), for PCB contamination.

• Spectra Energy’s underground gas storage reservoir in Moss Bluff, TX experienced catastrophic failure in 2004 with two explosions, spewing flames as high as 1,000 feet. An estimated 6 bcf of natural gas was consumed during the fire, which lasted nearly one week.

• On August 23, 2009, Spectra Energy’s Steckman Ridge, PA, natural gas compressor station experienced an “emergency shutdown,” releasing 1,629 pounds of lubricating oil and 6,460 pounds of methane (including 1,151 pounds of volatile organic compounds), coating a fertile agricultural, fishing and hunting region with potentially toxic industrial gear oil. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) issued two Notices of Violation. Nearby landowners reported to FERC a total of 43 additional shutdowns and/or blowdowns at the same compressor station between August 2009 and June 2011.

• According to The Vancouver Sun, Spectra Energy’s Pine River natural gas processing plant is the top polluter in British Columbia, discharging 1.2 million tonnes of greenhouse gas pollutants. The company’s Fort Nelson gas plant was ranked the #3 polluter in BC.

• The plan is for the NJ-NY Expansion project to be monitored by the builder/Applicant (Spectra/its subsidiaries); the dEIS states, “The Applicants would operate and maintain the newly constructed pipeline facilities in the same manner as they currently operate and maintain their existing systems.” Given their past record, this is an assurance, not of safety, but of calamity.

4. Pipeline regulation and oversight in America is sorely inadequate.

• Spectra is excluded from regulations of the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts.

• Fear of an explosion from this 30” high pressure pipeline is well placed. Nationwide, pipeline accidents result in, on average, a death every 3 weeks, and injuries or burns more than once a week.

• Before 2002, there was no federal regulation of pipelines. Nationwide, there are roughly 2.5 million miles of pipeline; of these, PHMSA has jurisdiction over just 174,000 miles of interstate lines. Just 7% of pipelines are subject to mandatory inspection. For the NJ-NY project, inspection is proposed only once every 7 years.

• There are only 88 auditors nationwide, who primarily review industry-supplied reports and do occasional field inspections. PHMSA reports 800-900 annual field inspections, or roughly just 10 per inspector.

• A senate bill calling for 40 additional inspectors and doubling the maximum fine, introduced after the San Bruno explosion, died in session. Tighter regulations are unlikely to pass under the current Congress.

• The inadequacy and inaccuracy of pipeline maps nationwide has been well documented.

• Steel pipes, such as the type suggested for the NJ-NY Expansion Project, corrode from moisture. When a pipeline loses thickness from corrosion, it is often “derated,” meaning that instead of replacing the damaged section, the pressure is lowered. The pressure had been lowered in the pipeline which blew up in San Bruno, CA, but a bad weld in the steel pipe could not withstand even that pressure.

• The principal means of detecting leaks is to search for desiccated grass and trees along the route, a method with obvious drawbacks in the underwater and paved urban areas this pipeline would traverse.

• “Pigs,” an inspection tool used to examine the interior of a pipeline, are limited by the diameter of the pipeline; when the diameter of a pipeline varies, as with the NJ-NY Expansion Project, the entire length of a pipeline cannot be examined by a pig.

5. The pipeline is an unnecessary infrastructure expense intended to enable export.

• The claim of increased local demand and stable pricing is a false premise. According to the NYS Energy Plan of 2009, “80% of New York State’s projected 5% gas demand growth [i.e., 4%] by 2020 will be in NYC and LI.” However, according to the same data, that baseline is 2007, and after 2010 demand is actually projected downward and then flat until 2020.

• This pipeline will extend the existing network of pipelines and proposed export facilities that will enable energy conglomerates to seek the highest global bidder. The result will be that our region will be more, not less, dependent on volatile supplies and prices, competing for gas with emerging markets in Latin America, Asia and elsewhere.


• In June, 2011, DOT Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) inspectors cited Spectra Energy for 17 inadequacies in its pipeline safety operations and procedures, including problems with pipeline surveillance, emergency plans, and welding procedures.

• Texas Eastern, the subsidiary of Spectra Energy that proposes to build the NJ-NY Expansion Project, received the EPA’s seventh highest Federal Penalty Assessment on record (nearly $25 million adjusted for inflation to 2009 numbers), for PCB contamination.

• Spectra Energy’s underground gas storage reservoir in Moss Bluff, TX experienced catastrophic failure in 2004 with two explosions, spewing flames as high as 1,000 feet. An estimated 6 bcf of natural gas was consumed during the fire, which lasted nearly one week.

• On August 23, 2009, Spectra Energy’s Steckman Ridge, PA, natural gas compressor station experienced an “emergency shutdown,” releasing 1,629 pounds of lubricating oil and 6,460 pounds of methane (including 1,151 pounds of volatile organic compounds), coating a fertile agricultural, fishing and hunting region with potentially toxic industrial gear oil. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) issued two Notices of Violation. Nearby landowners reported to FERC a total of 43 additional shutdowns and/or blowdowns at the same compressor station between August 2009 and June 2011.

• According to The Vancouver Sun, Spectra Energy’s Pine River natural gas processing plant is the top polluter in British Columbia, discharging 1.2 million tonnes of greenhouse gas pollutants. The company’s Fort Nelson gas plant was ranked the #3 polluter in BC.

• The plan is for the NJ-NY Expansion project to be monitored by the builder/Applicant (Spectra/its subsidiaries); the dEIS states, “The Applicants would operate and maintain the newly constructed pipeline facilities in the same manner as they currently operate and maintain their existing systems.” Given their past record, this is an assurance, not of safety, but of calamity.

4. Pipeline regulation and oversight in America is sorely inadequate.

• Spectra is excluded from regulations of the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts.

• Fear of an explosion from this 30” high pressure pipeline is well placed. Nationwide, pipeline accidents result in, on average, a death every 3 weeks, and injuries or burns more than once a week.

• Before 2002, there was no federal regulation of pipelines. Nationwide, there are roughly 2.5 million miles of pipeline; of these, PHMSA has jurisdiction over just 174,000 miles of interstate lines. Just 7% of pipelines are subject to mandatory inspection. For the NJ-NY project, inspection is proposed only once every 7 years.

• There are only 88 auditors nationwide, who primarily review industry-supplied reports and do occasional field inspections. PHMSA reports 800-900 annual field inspections, or roughly just 10 per inspector.

• A senate bill calling for 40 additional inspectors and doubling the maximum fine, introduced after the San Bruno explosion, died in session. Tighter regulations are unlikely to pass under the current Congress.

• The inadequacy and inaccuracy of pipeline maps nationwide has been well documented.

• Steel pipes, such as the type suggested for the NJ-NY Expansion Project, corrode from moisture. When a pipeline loses thickness from corrosion, it is often “derated,” meaning that instead of replacing the damaged section, the pressure is lowered. The pressure had been lowered in the pipeline which blew up in San Bruno, CA, but a bad weld in the steel pipe could not withstand even that pressure.

• The principal means of detecting leaks is to search for desiccated grass and trees along the route, a method with obvious drawbacks in the underwater and paved urban areas this pipeline would traverse.

• “Pigs,” an inspection tool used to examine the interior of a pipeline, are limited by the diameter of the pipeline; when the diameter of a pipeline varies, as with the NJ-NY Expansion Project, the entire length of a pipeline cannot be examined by a pig.

5. The pipeline is an unnecessary infrastructure expense intended to enable export.

• The claim of increased local demand and stable pricing is a false premise. According to the NYS Energy Plan of 2009, “80% of New York State’s projected 5% gas demand growth [i.e., 4%] by 2020 will be in NYC and LI.” However, according to the same data, that baseline is 2007, and after 2010 demand is actually projected downward and then flat until 2020.

• This pipeline will extend the existing network of pipelines and proposed export facilities that will enable energy conglomerates to seek the highest global bidder. The result will be that our region will be more, not less, dependent on volatile supplies and prices, competing for gas with emerging markets in Latin America, Asia and elsewhere.

• In June, 2011, DOT Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) inspectors cited Spectra Energy for 17 inadequacies in its pipeline safety operations and procedures, including problems with pipeline surveillance, emergency plans, and welding procedures.

• Texas Eastern, the subsidiary of Spectra Energy that proposes to build the NJ-NY Expansion Project, received the EPA’s seventh highest Federal Penalty Assessment on record (nearly $25 million adjusted for inflation to 2009 numbers), for PCB contamination.

• Spectra Energy’s underground gas storage reservoir in Moss Bluff, TX experienced catastrophic failure in 2004 with two explosions, spewing flames as high as 1,000 feet. An estimated 6 bcf of natural gas was consumed during the fire, which lasted nearly one week.

• On August 23, 2009, Spectra Energy’s Steckman Ridge, PA, natural gas compressor station experienced an “emergency shutdown,” releasing 1,629 pounds of lubricating oil and 6,460 pounds of methane (including 1,151 pounds of volatile organic compounds), coating a fertile agricultural, fishing and hunting region with potentially toxic industrial gear oil. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) issued two Notices of Violation. Nearby landowners reported to FERC a total of 43 additional shutdowns and/or blowdowns at the same compressor station between August 2009 and June 2011.

• According to The Vancouver Sun, Spectra Energy’s Pine River natural gas processing plant is the top polluter in British Columbia, discharging 1.2 million tonnes of greenhouse gas pollutants. The company’s Fort Nelson gas plant was ranked the #3 polluter in BC.

• The plan is for the NJ-NY Expansion project to be monitored by the builder/Applicant (Spectra/its subsidiaries); the dEIS states, “The Applicants would operate and maintain the newly constructed pipeline facilities in the same manner as they currently operate and maintain their existing systems.” Given their past record, this is an assurance, not of safety, but of calamity.

4. Pipeline regulation and oversight in America is sorely inadequate.

• Spectra is excluded from regulations of the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts.

• Fear of an explosion from this 30” high pressure pipeline is well placed. Nationwide, pipeline accidents result in, on average, a death every 3 weeks, and injuries or burns more than once a week.

• Before 2002, there was no federal regulation of pipelines. Nationwide, there are roughly 2.5 million miles of pipeline; of these, PHMSA has jurisdiction over just 174,000 miles of interstate lines. Just 7% of pipelines are subject to mandatory inspection. For the NJ-NY project, inspection is proposed only once every 7 years.

• There are only 88 auditors nationwide, who primarily review industry-supplied reports and do occasional field inspections. PHMSA reports 800-900 annual field inspections, or roughly just 10 per inspector.

• A senate bill calling for 40 additional inspectors and doubling the maximum fine, introduced after the San Bruno explosion, died in session. Tighter regulations are unlikely to pass under the current Congress.

• The inadequacy and inaccuracy of pipeline maps nationwide has been well documented.

• Steel pipes, such as the type suggested for the NJ-NY Expansion Project, corrode from moisture. When a pipeline loses thickness from corrosion, it is often “derated,” meaning that instead of replacing the damaged section, the pressure is lowered. The pressure had been lowered in the pipeline which blew up in San Bruno, CA, but a bad weld in the steel pipe could not withstand even that pressure.

• The principal means of detecting leaks is to search for desiccated grass and trees along the route, a method with obvious drawbacks in the underwater and paved urban areas this pipeline would traverse.

• “Pigs,” an inspection tool used to examine the interior of a pipeline, are limited by the diameter of the pipeline; when the diameter of a pipeline varies, as with the NJ-NY Expansion Project, the entire length of a pipeline cannot be examined by a pig.

5. The pipeline is an unnecessary infrastructure expense intended to enable export.

• The claim of increased local demand and stable pricing is a false premise. According to the NYS Energy Plan of 2009, “80% of New York State’s projected 5% gas demand growth [i.e., 4%] by 2020 will be in NYC and LI.” However, according to the same data, that baseline is 2007, and after 2010 demand is actually projected downward and then flat until 2020.

• This pipeline will extend the existing network of pipelines and proposed export facilities that will enable energy conglomerates to seek the highest global bidder. The result will be that our region will be more, not less, dependent on volatile supplies and prices, competing for gas with emerging markets in Latin America, Asia and elsewhere.

As if all the above isn't enough to worry about, if anything goes wrong with the pipeline, the controls are located in Texas.

If the pipeline does explode in The West Village, the scope of the of damage could be as follows:

1. The pipeline is a direct threat to the public health, safety, property values and economy of eastern New Jersey and New York City, especially to the residents, businesses, galleries, schools, religious and cultural institutions of downtown Manhattan, Staten Island, and Jersey City.

Should the pipeline or vault explode on the Manhattan side of the Hudson, the potential fire radius would encompass three historic districts, including: 10 irreplaceable Landmarked buildings; 10 schools or daycare centers; 8 playgrounds, including a large playground on the pier directly adjacent to the Sanitation Pier (the entry point of the pipeline); 13 churches or religious institutions; more than 28 art and cultural centers (including the Ground Zero Museum Workshop); the Hudson River Greenway, shoreline and West Side Highway; more than 38 restaurants; countless boutiques, hotels, businesses and residences. The proposed 17’ x 26’ vault is sited on the same block as the soon-to-be-built Whitney Downtown, as well as the massively popular High Line, which attracts 2 million annual visitors and has been credited with bringing $2 billion in private investment, 12,000 new jobs, and nearly 29 major new developments to New York’s economy. The pipeline’s metering and reading stations will emit airborne carcinogens, which will waft over downtown Manhattan, Staten Island, and Brooklyn. LUGs (Lost Unaccounted Gas) are estimated at an average of 3 to 5% with as much as 12 to 20% to be lost on the western side of the Hudson River. In addition, according to Professor James W. Ring, Professor of Physics Emeritus at Hamilton College, radon released at drill sites in the Marcellus has the potential to be carried with the gas to point of use at stoves and boilers in residences, putting citizens throughout the five boroughs and elsewhere at increased risk of lung cancer.

When those of us who live in NYC "...to get out of Dodge" my thoughts went instantly to the destruction that could be wreaked on the city by this pipeline, (among other things.)

This is what happened in San Bruno California. This is a Spectra pipeline explosion; the company that is slated to come to NYC.

http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/13/before-during-and-after-the-san-bruno-fire/
 
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