Calling it “one of the largest threats to the Mt. Hood National Forest”, the environmental group Bark holds a meeting Thursday night on the Palomar Pipeline.
Palomar is a 220-mile natural gas pipeline that crosses Northwest Oregon from the Columbia River near Astoria, to Maupin. That route includes 47-miles through the Mt. Hood National Forest, and that’s what concerns Bark. That section of the route includes old growth forests, the Pacific Crest Trail and the Wild and Scenic Clackamas River.
When: 7:00pm
Where: Mt. Tabor Presbyterian Church, SE Belmont at 54th, Portland
With a decision on the Palomar pipeline due any day now, two environmental groups are stepping up their efforts to keep it from being built.
On Saturday, Students Against LNG will be hiking to a spot in the Mt. Hood National Forest where the proposed pipeline route crosses the Clackamas River.
Then next week, Bark is leading a similar trip to where the pipeline may cross Fish Creek.
The fight over the Bradwood Landing LNG project enters a new phase as all sides get ready for arguments before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
No court date has been set yet. But an important deadline just passed as some of the the groups suing to stop Bradwood filed legal briefs with the court. The documents give us some new insights into why they want the appeals court to just say “no” to Bradwood Landing.
UPDATE: LC 85 has been introduced to the special session as SB 1020.
The Hey! Northwest Natural campaign is raising the alarm about a bill that would make it easier for LNG pipelines to be built in Oregon.
According to the group, LC-85 allows pipeline companies and utilities to get permits to fill wetlands on private land, even if the landowners object. They’re calling this a shortcut in the permitting process, putting LNG pipelines on a faster track towards approval.
The Hey! NW Natural campaign to block the Palomar Pipeline moved from cyberspace to the physical world Tuesday afternoon with a rally in downtown Portland. It was a small group, not surprising considering the cold weather.
But they came armed with the names of some 1500 landowners who’ll be affected if the pipeline is built, and a petition with 400 more names of other Oregonians who oppose it. The rally was held outside the headquarters of NW Natural Gas, one of the main partners trying to build Palomar.
Hey! NW Natural has been busy on social media sites trying to raise awareness about the pipeline, the damage they say it will do to Oregon’s environment and the impact it will have on landowners who have property along the proposed route.
Meet Steve Wick. He’s a Yamhill County hazelnut farmer who’s so old-school he still calls them filberts. He’s an anti-LNG activist, self described “big mouth”, and if all goes according to plan, a soon to be viral video sensation
Wick stars in a new YouTube video (see below) that’s trying to get people’s attention about the Palomar Pipeline, a 220-mile natural gas pipeline that runs through the heart of Oregon’s wine country, Willamette Valley farm land, and the Mt. Hood National Forest. “Oregon’s bread basket,” as Wick likes to call it.
For Wick, it’s a personal battle. The proposed route runs through the middle of his small farm, cutting a 150-foot wide path in a field where he wants to plant grapes and across 20 acres of forest that he and his wife have nurtured since moving here in 1992. If the pipeline goes in, Wick won’t be able to plant those grapes or replace the trees that would be cut down. Just the idea that a pipeline might come in means there’s not much he can do with his property until the issue is settled. “I’m up in limbo here,” he says.
Wick isn’t alone. He tells of one neighbor whose organic farm will be destroyed by the Palomar Pipeline. Others he knows will lose chunks of their hazelnut orchards.
And one more thing. “A lot of people don’t know about this,” says Wick. One of the partners in this project is NW Natural Gas, the home-grown, Portland based company that’s been around since before Oregon was a state. In Wick’s view, “They’re doing this to Oregon and there’s no need for it.”
It’s that last point that has become the central message for Wick and others working to block the pipeline. They formed a campaign called Hey! NW Natural that’s using social media tools like Facebook and Twitter to get NW Natural customers and shareholders involved in the fight against Palomar. Well known environmental groups like the Oregon Sierra Club, Columbia Riverkeeper, Bark and Friends of Living Oregon Waters are helping to spread the word.
Monica Vaughan is one of the organizers of the social media effort, which kicked off less than a week ago. “We’re asking NW Natural customers,” she says, “to think about where your gas is coming from.” Like Wick, she says most people in the Portland area aren’t aware that the utility is developing the pipeline. She hopes the video and website will help farmers tell their stories, and convince customers to take action to block Palomar. Future plans include handing out anti-LNG inserts that can be mailed in with utility bills and anti-LNG stickers to slap on natural gas meters.
Her goal, get NW Natural to drop Palomar before its next stockholder meeting in May of 2010.
Ask Wick what’s so bad about Palomar and he can list a number of things. Like others in the anti-LNG movement he says none of the natural gas that will flow through Palomar will serve people in Oregon, even though our state will feel all the impact. The Palomar website is vague on the point, saying it will deliver gas to Oregon and “other western states”. For many anti-LNG’ers, that means its really going to California.
Palomar is also controversial because it ties in to the proposed Bradwood Landing LNG Plant on the Columbia River near Astoria. Opponents are concerned that Bradwood poses a risk to salmon habitat, to fishing and shipping on the river, and is a danger to public safety. Without Palomar, Bradwood isn’t connected to interstate pipelines. So anti-LNG opponents hope that by killing one project, they can kill both of them.
The environmental group Bark is hoping for a big turnout at its second annual rally to block the Palomar Pipeline. The event starts today at Noon outside the Oregon Convention Center on MLK Blvd. in Portland.
Meanwhile, inside the Convention Center, it’s the annual shareholders meeting of NW Natural. The gas company is a major player in the Palomar Pipeline and Bark wants to bring the issue to the attention of investors.
The Palomar pipeline would cross about 217 miles of Northwest Oregon from the Columbia River near Astoria to a site just NW of Shaniko in Wasco County. Along the way, it would cross some of the state’s prime wine country, farm land, and the Mt. Hood National Forest. Residents along the proposed route say it would devastate the area.
Perhaps worse, in the eyes of the anti-LNG forces, it would link the proposed Bradwood Landing LNG plant to the interstate gas transmission system.