Current:Home > MarketsAfter Litigation and Local Outcry, Energy Company Says It Will Not Move Forward with LNG Plant in Florida Panhandle -Elite Financial Minds
After Litigation and Local Outcry, Energy Company Says It Will Not Move Forward with LNG Plant in Florida Panhandle
View
Date:2025-04-18 07:14:52
ORLANDO, Fla.—A proposed liquified natural gas plant in the Florida Panhandle that had drawn litigation and widespread local opposition will not move forward, the company behind the plan said this week.
The proposal had triggered a lawsuit in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit over what one consumer advocacy group said was a legal loophole that would limit federal regulatory oversight at the LNG plant and make way for similar plants nationwide.
Inside Climate News reported on the loophole in May, although the company said the decision not to move forward was made earlier.
“In 2022, Nopetro Energy conducted due diligence on a site for a proposed natural gas plant in Port St. Joe,” Ed Hart, senior vice president of supply at Nopetro Energy, based in Miami, said in a statement via email. “Many months ago, after completion of that process, Nopetro Energy decided to no longer pursue the opportunity, purely due to market conditions.”
Nopetro had called for the LNG plant to be constructed on 60 acres adjacent to the historically Black community of Port St. Joe, a rural coastal town some 100 miles from Tallahassee. A groundswell of residents, Black and white, raised concerns, most notably that the plant would not be compatible with local plans to revitalize the Black community, called North Port St. Joe.
Even though Nopetro said the decision not to move forward was made months ago, residents only learned of the decision this week, because of a local newspaper article. Aside from providing the statement, Nopetro did not respond to a request for comment this week on why the company had not notified residents earlier. Nor did the company respond in May, before or after Inside Climate News reported on the community’s protest against what residents thought was a pending proposal.
“My first reaction when I heard about it was, ‘Thank God,’” said Dannie Bolden, a local activist for North Port St. Joe. “This really encourages me to believe in people power, the ability of the community to come together and be able to take charge and challenge things that they think are improper or unhealthy for residents of the community.”
The LNG plant would have involved three enormous refrigerators to cool natural gas to minus-260 degrees Fahrenheit, turning the fossil fuel into a liquid. The LNG then would have been loaded into shipping containers and trucked a crucial quarter mile—1,300 feet—to a dock, where a crane would hoist the containers onto cargo ships destined for the Caribbean and Latin America.
The 1,300 feet was a crucial detail because it enabled Nopetro to move forward with the plant without federal oversight, sparing the company a lengthy and costly environmental review process that would have involved the public, said Tyson Slocum, energy program director at Public Citizen, the consumer advocacy group that sued over the plant.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission had found that because the LNG would be trucked rather than piped directly onto the ships waiting at the dock, the plant was outside the commission’s jurisdiction.
Slocum said the group would continue with its litigation in hopes of closing the loophole for good. Oral arguments are expected this fall, and a decision could come in early 2024.
“It’s probably prudent for them to pump the brakes and hit pause on this because our lawsuit throws everything into flux,” he said. “I don’t see anything in this latest development that shuts and locks the door on Nopetro building an LNG facility in Port St. Joe. I think it just has hit pause for an indefinite period of time, which is great cause for celebration.”
Despite the widespread local opposition, the plant notably had benefited from the quiet but deliberate support of state Rep. Jason Shoaf, a local Republican. Shoaf is vice president of the St. Joe Gas Company Inc., which connects to a massive interstate pipeline that would have provided natural gas for the plant. Shoaf’s father, Stuart Shoaf, is the gas company’s president. Rep. Shoaf did not respond to a request for comment about Nopetro’s decision not to move forward.
Nationwide LNG exports are booming. Until 2014, the United States did not ship any LNG overseas. Last year the country became the world’s top exporter, with eight terminals now operating and more on the way. The exports have been pushed by the oil industry, which has experienced declining domestic demand even as production has soared. The exports also have helped European countries wean themselves from Russian gas. LNG takes up 1/600th of the volume of natural gas, making the liquid form of the fossil fuel more economical to ship.
Many of the export terminals are clustered along the Gulf Coast of Louisiana and Texas, in Black and Latino communities that already are home to a concentration of polluting oil and gas terminals and petrochemical plants—the same communities that are the most vulnerable to climate change impacts like hotter temperatures, rising seas and more damaging hurricanes. Bolden, the local activist for North Port St. Joe, said residents will not give up their campaign against construction of the LNG export terminal.
“We would like to see no LNG in the Panhandle. That is our hope,” he said. “So our work will be to continue to work with Public Citizen and many other environmental groups to make sure that there is no LNG facility in the Florida Panhandle.”
veryGood! (48)
Related
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Report: WNBA agrees to $2.2B, 11-year media rights deal with ESPN, Amazon, NBC
- Jack Black cancels Tenacious D tour as Australia officials criticize Kyle Gass' Trump comment
- The challenges of navigating an unrelenting news cycle
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Climate change is making days longer, according to new research
- Pedro Hill: What is cryptocurrency
- Powerball winning numbers for July 17 drawing: Jackpot at $75 million
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Sheryl Lee Ralph overjoyed by Emmy Awards nomination: 'Never gets old'
Ranking
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Parent Trap's Lindsay Lohan Reunites With Real-Life Hallie 26 Years Later
- What Heather Rae and Tarek El Moussa Are Doing Amid Christina Hall's Divorce From Josh Hall
- US Army honors Nisei combat unit that helped liberate Tuscany from Nazi-Fascist forces in WWII
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Biden says he'd reconsider running if some medical condition emerged
- FACT FOCUS: Trump, in Republican convention video, alludes to false claim 2020 election was stolen
- The Vampire Diaries' Torrey DeVitto Says She Quit Show Due to Paul Wesley Divorce
Recommendation
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
After crash that killed 6 teens, NTSB chief says people underestimate marijuana’s impact on drivers
Gymnast Gabby Douglas Weighs In On MyKayla Skinner’s Team USA Comments
Bobbi Althoff Reacts to “F--cking Ignorant” Rumor She Sleeps With Famous Interviewees
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
WNBA players’ union head concerned league is being undervalued in new media deal
US judge dismisses Republican challenge over counting of post-Election Day mail ballots in Nevada
Summer heat is causing soda cans to burst on Southwest Airlines flights, injuring flight attendants