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This is the NewsBradwood LNG reaches key milestone, enters ESA consultationDecember 30, 2009
The Endangered Species Act consultation between the National Marine Fisheries Service and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is a key milestone in the approval process for Bradwood Landing.
The Endangered Species Act requires federal agencies, in consultation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and/or the National Marine Fisheries Service to conserve species and their designated critical habitat listed under the ESA as “threatened” or “endangered.” Bradwood Landing has submitted all of the requested scientific studies and reports to FERC that are needed to initiate the consultation process with NMFS. These documents, consisting of more than 5,000 pages of technical information, comprise the Biological Assessment.
During the consultation process, agencies will evaluate the effects of the proposed project on the survival of species and any potential adverse modification of critical habitat, based on “the best scientific and commercial data available” for the purpose of producing a Biological Opinion.
Since its inception, Bradwood Landing has worked to ensure it will provide a significant and sustainable net benefit for fish, wildlife, and the lower Columbia ecosystem, and serve as a model of sustainable development. Using best available science and recovery plans, as well as new studies and modeling, the project includes innovative measures to avoid and minimize impacts, robust mitigation, and a $59 million voluntary (but legally binding) Salmon Enhancement Initiative: the largest private investment of its kind ever proposed for the region.
Collectively, these measures will restore and protect thousands of acres of habitat and increase juvenile salmon survival by hundreds of thousands or even millions of fish each year. The Salmon Enhancement Initiative will be managed by regional restoration entities (agencies, tribes, fish recovery groups) and will provide a model and a sustained mechanism that encourages and enables other “net benefit” proposals associated with needed infrastructure projects.
About Bradwood Landing
Bradwood Landing’s coalition of supporters includes the Oregon AFL-CIO, the Columbia Pacific Building Trades Council, the Washington State Building and Construction Trades Council, the Oregon Machinists Council, the Washington Machinists Council, Carpenters Local 1707 and the International Longshore Workers’ Union (Columbia River Oregon Area), the Steamship Operators Association, and more than 2,500 citizens which have sent letters or cards of support to FERC, Clatsop County and the Governor.
A regional analysis of the effects of increased natural gas supply from a Columbia River LNG terminal by University of Oregon economist Dr. Phil Romero, showed that Bradwood could reduce the wholesale cost of natural gas by 13 percent. Dr. Romero’s analysis showed this decrease in energy costs would help support the creation of between 5,100 and 20,300 jobs. Download PDF (277 KB pdf file)<< Back to News |