Imperial Valley Press

Washington state panel calls for oil terminal denial

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SEATTLE (AP) — A Washington state energy panel voted unanimousl­y Tuesday to recommend that Gov. Jay Inslee reject a massive oil-by-rail terminal proposed along the Columbia River.

The Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, which has been evaluating the project since 2013, said developers had not met their burden to show that the proposed port of Vancouver site was acceptable.

The panel will forward its recommenda­tion to Inslee by Dec. 29. The Democratic governor will have 60 days to make a final decision.

The Vancouver Energy terminal, a joint venture of Tesoro Corp. and Savage Cos., would receive about 360,000 barrels of crude oil a day by trains at the port of Vancouver. Oil would temporaril­y be stored on site and then loaded onto tankers and ships bound for West Coast refineries.

Vancouver Energy said in an emailed statement Tuesday that it was extremely disappoint­ed. The panel “has set an impossible standard for new energy facilities based on the risk of incidents that the Final Environmen­tal Impact Statement characteri­zes as extremely unlikely,” said Jeff Hymas, a Vancouver Energy spokesman.

Roselyn Marcus, interim chair of the council, presided over the meeting in Olympia that lasted about 10 minutes.

She noted that the council weighed more than 250,000 public comments in “probably the longest process in this council’s history with issues of great significan­ce that have never been faced by this council before.”

Marcus said state law requires project applicants to prove that the needs and benefits of the facility at the proposed site outweigh the negative impacts to the broad public interest.

Developers have said the terminal is needed to bring crude oil from North Dakota and other areas to a western U.S. port to meet growing fuel demands and future energy needs. They’ve argued that it could be built safely and would secure a reliable supply of energy for the state.

Tribes, environmen­tal groups and municipali­ties such as the city of Vancouver lined up against the project.

Opponents argued that the terminal would mostly benefit the energy needs of California — and potentiall­y overseas markets in the future — while exposing Washington communitie­s to all the public safety and environmen­tal risks.

“The entire region is looking to Governor Inslee, now, to follow EFSEC’s lead,” Rebecca Ponzio, director of the Stand Up to Oil Campaign, said in a statement. “We trust him to get this right,” she added.

An environmen­tal study released last week found that the project poses a potential risk of oil spills, train accidents and longer emergency response times due to road traffic. Many of the risks could be decreased with certain mitigation measures, but the study outlined four areas where it said the impacts are significan­t and cannot be avoided.

It identified those risks as train accidents, emergency response delays, negative impacts on low-income communitie­s and the possibilit­y that an earthquake would damage the facility’s dock and cause an oil spill.

While the “likelihood of occurrence of the potential for oil spills may be low, the consequenc­es of the events could be severe,” the study said.

 ?? NATALIE BEHRING/THE COLUMBIAN VIA AP ?? This photo taken Jan. 5, 2016, shows Maureen Hildreth, center, attends a public hearing on a proposed southwest Washington state massive oil-handling facility in RiWgefield, Wash. A state energy panel has unanimousl­y voted to recommend disapprovi­ng a...
NATALIE BEHRING/THE COLUMBIAN VIA AP This photo taken Jan. 5, 2016, shows Maureen Hildreth, center, attends a public hearing on a proposed southwest Washington state massive oil-handling facility in RiWgefield, Wash. A state energy panel has unanimousl­y voted to recommend disapprovi­ng a...

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