MEDIA RELEASE
November
15, 2006
For more
information:
Janice
Harvey,
Co-chair, SPB/C
Margot
Sackett, Fundraising co-chair,
SPB/C
Charlotte
County
residents being asked
to support “No LNG” campaign
St.
Andrews,
NB: Over 12,000 flyers entitled
“LNG – No way in our bay!” are going into Charlotte
County
mailboxes this week,
compliments of Save Passamaquoddy Bay /.Canada.
The citizens group formed to oppose three LNG terminals
proposed for the
Maine
shore
of Passamaquoddy
Bay
wants to inform all residents of Charlotte
County
of the issues
associated with such development and urge them to support the campaign.
“It’s
important that everyone know the basics of the
LNG issue and where things stand today,” explained Janice
Harvey,
co-chair of the group. “With the right
whales providing people with
a first hand view over the past few weeks of what’s at stake, support
for our
campaign needs to come from all corners of county.”
Rather
than leave the Bay
of Fundy
at the end of the summer, as many
as three dozen endangered North
Atlantic
right whales came inshore. Generally seen
further out in the bay, they
have been visible from land at Head Harbour, Campobello, Pea Point near
the
Wallace Cove ferry landing, Crow Harbour near Seeley’s Cove, Route 1
along
Maces Bay, Deadman’s Harbour where one was caught in a weir,
Swallowtail and
Long Eddy Point on Grand Manan, and along the route of the Grand Manan
ferry. These whales are listed as
endangered, with only 350 individuals left and fewer than 100 breeding
females. Ship strikes are the leading
cause of death for whales.
“These
whales have been moving back and forth along
the route LNG tankers would take to Passamaquoddy Bay, either veering
off the
shipping lane between The Wolves and Grand Manan, or travelling through
the
Grand Manan Channel,” said Harvey. “If
both of the terminals are built, there would be more than 500
additional ship
transits into and out of Head Harbour Passage every year. The developers have said right whales don’t
use this area. Well, the whales proved
them wrong this year.”
Save
Passamaquoddy
Bay
/ Canada
is using a two-pronged approach to
prevent the LNG terminals from being built.
First, they are pressing the federal government to ban LNG
tankers from
entering Head Harbour Passage, internal Canadian waters over which Ottawa
has jurisdiction. Citizens are being urged
to write to Prime
Minister Harper supporting such a ban and asking him to act quickly.
Second,
the group is preparing to be an intervenor in
the regulatory approval process in the United
States.
This is carried out by the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
(FERC). They have engaged a lawyer in
the US
to represent them before FERC, a
long, involved process that requires written comments to be filed after
reviewing thousands of pages of reports submitted by the LNG companies. Should FERC approve either project, Save
Passamaquoddy Bay / Canada
is preparing to challenge that
decision in a US
federal appeal court.
“Clearly,
this is an expensive and time-consuming
route to go, “ Harvey
said of the FERC process. “It could all be
avoided if Prime Minister
Harper signaled through legislation his intent to refuse tanker passage. Until that happens, however, we have to be
prepared for all eventualities, including a court challenge.”
Downeast
LNG and Quoddy Bay LNG
are expected to file formal project applications with FERC within weeks. When that happens, the FERC review process
begins. Save Passamaquoddy
Bay
wants the federal
government to step in and shut this whole business down before those
applications are filed.
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30 -
Contact
the Fundy
Baykeeper
office if
you want a pdf version of the LNG flyer.