Anonymous - 11-29-2004 at 01:15 AM
http://www.dailybreeze.com/opinion/articles/1208961.html
New plant may consign California to a future of dependence on high-priced foreign energy.
By Tom Elias
November 28, 2004
And so it begins. Fully 23 years after the first attempt to bring liquefied natural gas to Californians disappeared in an unpredicted, unforeseeable
worldwide glut of natural gas, all needed approvals are in place for the first of several LNG developments to start extracting California dollars to
pay for a new foreign-supplied fuel.
That's today's reality, now that the Mexican city of Ensenada has signed off on a permit allowing San Diego-based Sempra Energy to begin building an
LNG receiving facility on the shore of a blue-water bay just north of town.
If all goes on schedule, by 2008 Sempra will import 1 billion cubic feet of natural gas yearly to its plant on the Costa Azur. That would amount to
just over one-sixth of the natural gas now consumed in California. The gas will arrive from Indonesia and the Russian Far East island of Sakhalin via
gigantic tankers supplied by British Petroleum and Royal Dutch/Shell Group. The fuel will be deep frozen into an inert, nonflammable liquid in oil
company facilities before it's loaded onto ships, then warmed up into gaseous form again at the Sempra plant.
Some of the imported gas would be reserved for use in Mexico and some might flow to Arizona via an existing Sempra pipeline now carrying American
supplies to Baja California. But at least half would likely come to California under terms of an autumn decision by the state Public Utilities
Commission.
Once Sempra starts construction, the pressure may become irresistible for California to allow construction of other LNG facilities off Long Beach and
Ventura County. Schwarzenegger administration officials were wined and dined earlier this year by proponents of those plans on an all-expenses paid
tour of Southeast Asia and Australia.
There should be a lot of worries here for California consumers. For one thing, there's the question of whether the Sempra project will lock in prices
at least as high as today's record levels.
Wholesale natural gas lately has sold for as much as $5.25 per million BTUs (one therm on your gas bill equals 100,000 BTUs), with the price marked up
to almost $8 for residential customers. That's about a 50 percent increase over 2002.
Sempra, as expected, insists that its new supplies of LNG will have to be competitive in order to be used. "We expect our gas to come in at about
$3.50 or $4 per million BTUs," said company spokesman Art Larson. "If our gas prices don't compete in California, the gas won't flow. It could go to
Arizona." In short, Sempra claims it might let its $1 billion plant and pipelines -- plus the expensive ships of BP and Shell -- sit idle if prices
drop significantly. Just such a price collapse occurred when the previous LNG effort was abandoned in 1981.
"I don't believe for a moment that they would idle an LNG plant under any circumstance," says Doug Heller, executive director of the Foundation for
Taxpayer and Consumer Rights. "We've learned too much through the energy crises to believe companies like this one will take the hit if their big
gamble goes bad. We also risk locking ourselves into a new dependency on foreign fuel."
Heller and others worry that once Sempra provides California with an assured -- at least for a while -- supply of natural gas, there will be no more
reason for this state to encourage development of new domestic natural gas supplies or construction of new pipelines to bring any new
American-produced energy here.
There is no way any American can sue to stop construction of the newly approved facility in Mexico. But the danger that it will consign California to
a limitless future of dependence on needlessly high-priced foreign energy is almost as great as it was 23 years ago.
And that doesn't even speak to the safety concerns many have about LNG facilities and the tankers that serve them.