VICTORY: Cabrillo LNG Terminal Stopped
I was unexpectedly yet unavoidably unable to attend any of today's public hearing in Oxnard for the proposed BHP Billiton LNG Terminal, but enough people showed up to make a difference.
The State Lands Commission decided late Monday not to award a lease essential to a proposed liquefied natural gas terminal off the Southern California coast, citing environmental concerns.
In the 2-1 vote, commissioners complicated efforts by Australia's BHP Billiton LNG International Inc. to build an $800 million terminal in the ocean northwest of Los Angeles, about 14 miles off Malibu and about 20 miles off Oxnard. BHP officials have said the facility would provide a reliable source of low-polluting energy.
The decision was met with loud cheers by the estimated 900 people who packed the auditorium for Monday's commission hearing. Many were opponents who wore blue shirts emblazoned with the words "Terminate the Terminal."
900 people, WOW. That's some real grassroots action. I'm guessing that Garamendi and Chiang did the right thing here (although a 2-1 vote the other way elected not to certify the environmental impact report, which keeps the door open for future predations, I fear).
LNG is a lower-polluting energy, but this terminal was unecessary, would have increased foreign consumption of oil, and would have lessened air quality. It's good to see it go down (for now).
Labels: BHP Billiton, environment, John Chiang, John Garamendi, LNG Terminal
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