| January 22,
2006
California has No Need for LNG
By Tam Hunt, Community Environmental Council
The author is energy program director of Santa
Barbara's Community Environmental Council and runs the CEC's
Fossil Free By '33 campaign.
Visit: www.fossilfreeby33.org
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Jan. 28, 1969.
It was the largest oil spill our nation had seen up to that point
-- a catastrophic blowout from an oil platform off Summerland
that spread an 800-square-mile oil slick from Rincon to Goleta.
Many of us alive today did not experience the tides of dead seals,
dolphins and birds; those who did say the spill stripped them
of their innocence and left them with indelible memories of crimes
against nature.
Although the players and stage have changed since 1969, the overall
story has not. We are faced with the same fundamental problem
now as we were then: our dependence on fossil fuels and the risks
associated with that dependence.
Today, California is exploring an energy option that is no more
necessary than drilling offshore (or for that matter, drilling
in national forests or the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge). The
latest debate centers around increasing California's natural gas
supplies by importing liquefied natural gas, or LNG.
The problem is, we don't need more natural gas in California because
renewable energy and energy efficiency can meet future energy
demands.
LNG is natural gas that has been cooled to the point where it
becomes a liquid, making it easier to transport. In California,
three LNG import terminals have been proposed, two of which would
be on the South Coast. One is planned for a site about 14 miles
offshore from Oxnard, by BHP Billiton, an Australian energy company.
The other has been proposed for Platform Grace, a retired oil
rig off Ventura's coast, by Houston-based Crystal Energy.
Anytime you concentrate a fuel and confine it in a small space,
concerns about safety and environmental protection arise. Even
without those concerns, however, I would argue this: these LNG
terminals simply aren't necessary.
The Community Environmental Council has completed a rigorous examination
of natural gas supply and demand and has concluded that there
are better, more viable alternatives. Essentially, if California
lives up to its own state laws mandating that we get more of our
electricity from renewable resources and energy efficiency, we
do not need these terminals.
Let's look at some numbers. Right now we need about 6.2 billion
cubic feet of natural gas a day to heat our homes and run our
power plants. The California Energy Commission -- the state's
official word in this area -- projects that by 2016, that number
will rise to 6.6 billion cubic feet. So we need to find an additional
400 million cubic feet per day in the next decade.
Before we start asking how we're going to meet that need, let's
look at what we need the natural gas for.
In California, about half of our power plants use natural gas
to generate electricity, which can be generated by other energy
sources such as wind and solar power. The rest is used for heating,
cooking and industry. Natural gas for electricity generation is
the only area expected to grow appreciably. So instead of trying
to find a source for 400 million cubic feet per day of natural
gas in the next 10 years, let's instead look for its equivalent:
about 43,000 gigawatt hours of electricity per year.
California law requires that 20 percent of our electricity come
from renewable resources by 2010, about 55,000 gigawatt hours
per year -- more than enough to meet the 43,000 gigawatt hours
we're looking for. (And the amount from renewables will probably
be higher, as the state is considering advancing its goal so that
33 percent of all electricity would be produced by renewables
by 2020.)
But we're not done. We haven't even yet asked whether we could
reduce demand through conservation and more efficient technology.
California's investor-owned utilities recently received $2 billion
in state funding to achieve $5 billion in energy efficiency savings,
equivalent to more than 10,000 gigawatt hours a year through 2008.
The state also has set an achievable goal of saving 23,000 gigawatt
hours per year by 2013.
Under these existing mandates, we will more than offset future
energy demand just by following the path that the state and the
utilities already have in place. Even if you wanted to hedge your
bets, there are 16 new LNG import terminals already approved by
regulators elsewhere in the U.S. and Baja California, as well
as plans for gas pipelines from Canada and Alaska -- all of which
could funnel more natural gas our way if needed.
While natural gas is certainly cleaner and a preferable choice
over oil or coal, let us not forget that it is still a non-renewable
source of energy and a potentially explosive fuel. It is our belief
that opting for LNG will ultimately divert attention from renewable
energy and energy efficiency -- the far more preferable alternatives.
Let's hope that policymakers at the local, state and federal levels
give more thought to the necessity of constructing offshore LNG
terminals than they did the construction of oil rigs off our coast.
As we pass the anniversary of the 1969 oil spill, we should be
asking ourselves: How long do we want to stay beholden to these
dinosaur fuels?
How long will we depend on fossil fuels?
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