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Protests across Florida against Sabal Trail, which is worse than reporters think

Misleading

Misleading

John Quarterman
John Quarterman

Suwannee Riverkeeper and WWALS representative John Quarterman gives some facts in the following article that expose and correct some misleading statements by  Sabal Trail’s Andrea Grover,  and he also shows that Audubon Florida does support Sabal Trail.  The misleading statements appeared in the Orlando Sentinel.

It is unfortunate that Audubon Florida chose to work with and negotiate with Sabal Trail, since the result was that the EPA and Sabal Trail used that as ammunition to show that environmentalist groups supported the pipeline.  It is also unfortunate that it seems that the press and other agencies go first to Audubon Florida as a source for environmentalist concerns, ignoring the Sierra Club and other groups.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
-A river is like a life:  once taken, it cannot be brought back-


 

On April 17, 2017 at 11:42AM, jsq at WWALS Watershed Coalition published the following article:

It’s not just two connected pipelines; it’s at least five just in Florida.
Audubon Florida did endorse Sabal Trail starting with FPL’s first announcement.
And sure, Ms. Grover, your “safety programs are designed to prevent pipeline failures”, but they haven’t actually stopped numerous incidents of corrosion, leaks, explosions, and compressor station blowouts.
Other than those things, it’s a pretty good story.

Beth Kassab and Kevin Spear, Orlando Sentinel, 2017-04-01,
Gas pipeline across Central Florida brings cheap energy and protests,

The WWALS Watershed Coalition, which advocates for protection of
Florida and Georgia rivers, has staunchly opposed nearly every
aspect of Sabal Trail, which crosses under the Suwannee, Santa Fe
and many other rivers.


84A5254 In: Protests across Florida against Sabal Trail, which is worse than reporters think | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River


South to Suwannee River, HDD Suwannee County
, RoW with pipe already buried, 30.4117310, -83.1566490

Coalition spokesman John Quarterman called the pipeline a profit bonanza for private companies and a boondoggle for utility customers.

Well, I said it’s a boondoggle for the utility, namely FPL, at the expense of its customers.
Here’s why I say that, including that FPL admitted in its 2016 Ten Year Plan that Florida
needs no new electricity until 2024 at the earliest, contradicting FPL’s 2013 excuse for Sabal Trail.

Back to the Orlando Sentinel:

Audubon Florida has not endorsed Sabal Trail but has been supportive
of FPL’s use of natural gas.

Well, except for being quoted in FPL’s 26 July 2013 press release announcing Sabal Trail:

“Natural gas, especially when used in combination with solar energy,
generates far fewer emissions than coal or oil,” said Eric Draper,
executive director of Audubon of Florida. “Audubon provided guidance
on the proposed pipeline route, and we commend FPL for working to
avoid sensitive habitats.”

And except for writing a letter to FERC endorsing Sabal Trail and being quoted in the press
under the headline “Audubon Florida supports Sabal Trail natural gas pipeline”
.

An endorsement letter to FERC that EPA chose to believe over numerous objections from Sierra Club, WWALS, and many others.

Back to the Orlando Sentinel story:

“Gas is better on air emissions than any other fuel,”
said Charles Lee, the conservation group’s advocacy director.

Well, that’s not true: hydrogen cracked from sea water with solar power is cleaner.
And how about no fuel at all, as in solar onshore and wind power off the Atlantic coast for the Sunshine State?
Mark Z. Jacobson’s Stanford research group has spelled out how everything in Florida can be powered by wind, water, and sun power, and nothing else, with real jobs (not fake pipeline jobs temporarily employing crews from
other states), better health, and lower power costs.

No article on Sabal Trail is complete without omissions by Andrea Grover.  Thanks to the Orlando Sentinel for not publishing as much of her  disinformation  as was included in another story.
Here’s what the Sentinel included:

Sabal spokeswoman Andrea Grover said the high-strength carbon pipe,
produced in Panama City and Mobile, Ala., is coated under high
temperature with epoxy on the outside and, while not required, also
inside the pipe to prevent corrosion.

She didn’t mention the pipe was illicitly stockpiled in a pipe yard north
of Lake City that as near as I can tell was never explicity approved by FERC
even after

WWALS called in the Army Corps of Engineers
.


Sabal Trail Lake City Pipe Yard

“Our safety programs are designed to prevent pipeline
failures, detect anomalies, perform repairs and often exceed
regulatory requirements,” she said.

Notice she didn’t say Sabal Trail’s safety programs actually do any of that.  Her pipeline company, Spectra Energy, has
a thirty-year rap sheet
of corrosion, leaks, and explosions, almost all not detected by Spectra.
On 21 December 2013, the U.S. Pipeline & Hazardous Materials Safety Agency (PHMSA)
sent a Final Order to Spectra CEO Greg Ebel for five violations of federal regulations and Spectra’s own company procedures.
On 14 July 2015, Canada’s National Energy Board (NEB), tiring of calling Spectraout on violation after violation, issued
a blanket order
to Spectra to fix its “management system failures.”

About those other pipelines that Ms. Grover never seems to mention:

Sure, Williams Transco’s Hillabee Expansion Project in Alabama,
Sabal Trail from there through Georgia to Orlando, and FSC from
Orlando to Indiantown on Lake Okeechobee were all permitted by
FERC as the Southeast Markets Pipeline Project (SMPP),
including the two Sabal Trail offshoots the Citrus County Pipeline
and the Hunters Creek Pipeline.
But FPL’s Riviera Beach pipeline and KMI’s JEP were not included in SMPP.
Nor were the four and more

LNG export
operations in Crystal River, Indiantown,
and elsewhere that are already authorized to liquify Sabal Trail methane for export,
nor the authorization of Florida East Coast Railway (FECR) to carry it by rail
as far as Jacksonville and Miami:
those were all authorized by the Department of Energy’s Office of Fossil Energy (FE).
For example,

a company from Wyoming based in Chicago (Advanced Energy Solutions or AES) was rubberstamped in
November 2013 to export liquid natural gas (LNG) from the Port of
Palm Beach, and it can transport LNG “over highways and/or by
rail”
.

These piecemeal authorizations have a legal technical term: segmentation.
At least one U.S. District Court found such segmentation illegal in another case.

Meanwhile, most Floridians have no idea how extensive Sabal Trail’s
inky squid arms of extra pipelines, LNG liquification, and bomb trucks, trains,
and ships really is.

Regulation isn’t working to control pipelines.
Now that solar power has already won the economic race,
it’s time to stop building any new pipelines.

-jsq, John S. Quarterman, Suwannee RIVERKEEPER®

You can join this fun and work by becoming a WWALS member today!

Read this article at WWALS Watershed Coalition at http://www.wwals.net/2017/04/17/protests-across-florida-against-sabal-trail-which-is-worse-than-reporters-think/.
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