Department of Homeland Security – Coast Guard
Department of Transportation – Maritime Administration
Public Hearing
McMoRan Exploration – Main Pass LNG Terminal
Grand Bay, Alabama
Pascagoula, Mississippi
New Orleans, Louisiana
Coastal Conservation Association
Testimony
Coastal Conservation Association is a
grassroots organization with 90,000 members in 15 state chapters
dedicated to the conservation, promotion and enhancement of the
present and future availability of coastal resources for the benefit
and enjoyment of the general public. CCA has been active in local,
state and federal fishery management issues for more than a quarter
century.
We are here today to formally, and strongly,
oppose the use of open-rack vaporization technology for the Main
Pass Liquefied Natural Gas Terminal proposed by McMoRan Exploration
16 miles southeast of Venice, Louisiana.
CCA fully supports the concerns outlined by
both the Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission and the Gulf of
Mexico Fishery Management Council on open-loop facilities. Far more
important than the known impacts of an open-loop system in this
location is the glaring lack of data on the potential impacts,
currently unknown. Decisions like this one, made decades ago with a
similar lack of information on long-term consequences, resulted in
the degradation of the Florida Everglades and the great wetlands of
Louisiana.
Experience proves that we often pay a great
price tomorrow, in pursuit of expediency today.
CCA rejects assertions that open-loop LNG
facilities will have minimal adverse impacts on marine resources.
There is simply not enough data to make that claim. CCA is concerned
about impacts to the entire marine ecosystem, from predators to
plankton. No science has been produced yet that can demonstrate
minimal impacts to that wide range of organisms. No one knows what
the true impact will be because no one knows exactly what is
floating in the ocean at all depths at all times of year.
CCA is opposed to open-loop systems for the
simple reason that there are still too many questions left
unanswered about the impact of not just this one terminal, but
several operating all together in the Gulf of Mexico.
What will be the true impact of one of these
plants?
No one knows.
What will be the cumulative impact of two,
three or more of these giant terminals?
No one knows.
It is a founding principle of CCA to err on the
side of caution in conservation matters where the science is
not currently adequate to determine long-term results. We have
expended enormous amounts of energy and money to save, restore and
protect the resources of the Gulf of Mexico. The hundreds of
thousands of recreational anglers who have worked to better steward
those resources are stunned to see that work jeopardized by the
unnecessary use of open-loop technology.
There are reasonable alternatives to open-loop
systems that do far less damage to the marine environment,
alternatives that do not represent such a huge gamble. CCA is
adamant that McMoRan Exploration not be allowed to gamble with our
marine resources and that a permit for an open-loop system be
denied.
On behalf of the 90,000 members of CCA, thank
you for the opportunity to present our concerns over this
application and to provide comments.