The Columbus Dispatch

Pipelines lead to jobs, security

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For decades, Ohioans have been struggling as the state economy fails to generate enough opportunit­y—in fact, Ohio has the fifthworst level of private-sector job growth from 1990 to 2016. To reverse this trend, we need companies to invest in Ohio and create jobs.

One of our state’s greatest assets for attracting investment is the natural-gas-rich Utica shale rock in southeast Ohio. However, before our state can take full advantage of this energy asset, we need better energy infrastruc­ture such as pipelines that get gas from the well to manufactur­ers, power plants and our homes.

Ohio’s Utica shale is projected to be one of the two largest sources of growth in natural gas production in the United States over the coming decades, which means high-paying energy jobs for Ohioans. However, there’s a problem: The state’s pipeline infrastruc­ture is already beyond capacity, creating a bottleneck that impedes the ability of energy producers to get gas to its customers.

This limitation makes energy producers less willing to invest more in Ohio and create jobs. The American Associatio­n of Civil Engineers gave America’s energy infrastruc­ture a D+ rating on its annual Infrastruc­ture Report Card this year. Much of Ohio’s aging infrastruc­ture was designed to carry energy to the Buckeye state. Now that we produce so much energy, pipelines are needed to move it from Ohio. This means safer, modern pipelines are necessary to alleviate the strain on our existing infrastruc­ture.

Fortunatel­y, some energyinfr­astructure investment­s are already underway, including the Rover Pipeline which will stretch all the way across Ohio.

The pipeline will create up to 6,500 constructi­on jobs in Ohio and pay out more than $600 million in wages. Local landowners are receiving payments to the tune of $120 million, and local government­s stand to receive approximat­ely $135 million in property taxes.

These direct benefits are coming from just one project, and there is much more opportunit­y on the table if we embrace more pipeline developmen­t.

Building new pipelines also carries indirect benefits. Many Ohio manufactur­ers earned new business, such as Ariel Corporatio­n in Mount Vernon being tapped to make compressor­s for the pipeline. Ohio families and businesses enjoy lower energy bills, freeing up money to save for college or hire more workers.

The Utica shale has given our state the ability to be a major player in America’s energy revolution. If we seize it by encouragin­g new pipelines, we will see more high-paying blue-collar jobs.

Ohio should embrace this new investment in infrastruc­ture and the opportunit­ies that come with it.

Joe Nichols Officer Strategic Partnershi­ps The Buckeye Institute Newark

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