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DAVE MESSERSMITH MARCELLUS EDUCATION TEAM PENN STATE EXTENSION Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

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Page 1: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

DAVE MESSERSMITH MARCELLUS EDUCATION TEAM PENN STATE EXTENSION

Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Page 2: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

• Project Updates.

• Review of Pipeline Safety Act.

• Review of Pipeline Placement Report.

• Proposed Pipeline Legislation

• Questions?

PA Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Page 3: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Natural Gas Pipelines in Pennsylvania

Gas Transmission 10,081 mi

Total Gas Pipeline

61,037 mi http://primis.phmsa.dot.gov/comm/reports/safety/PA_detail1.html

Page 4: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

PA Gas Transmission by County

http://primis.phmsa.dot.gov/comm/reports/safety/PA_detail1.html | Report generated on: 04/08/13

Page 5: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup
Page 6: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

6

Marcellus & Utica Shale Projects

Source: FERC

Appalachian Basin

Oakford

Tennessee Station 219

Corning

Leidy

Linden

Rivervale

Transco Compressor Station 195

Princeton

Lambertville

Marcellus Shale Projects

Clarington

Approved or Pending Projects Potential Projects

Keystone (Dominion/Williams)

Northeast Supply (Williams)*

* Combined Transco’s Rockaway Lateral and Northeast Connector Projects

Appalachia to Market Expansion

TEAM 2013 & U2GC Project (TETCO)

NYMarc (Iroquois)

New Penn (NiSource)

Marcellus to Manhattan (Millennium) NiSource & UGI

MPP Project (Tennessee)

N Bridge, TIME 3, TEMAX (TETCO) NiSource/MarkWest & NiSource

Appalachian Expansion (NiSource) Line 300 Exp (Tennessee)

Appalachian & Natrium (Dominion) Line N & N, R & I Projects (NFG) Tioga County Extension (Empire)

Northeast Upgrade (Tennessee)

Low Pressure East-West (Equitrans)

NJ-NY Project (TETCO & Algonquin)

Sunrise Project (Equitrans) TEAM 2012 Project (TETCO)

Marc I (Central NY)

Northeast Supply Link (Transco) NSD (Tennessee) & (Dominion)

Northeast Expansion (Dominion)

Northern Access (NFG & Tennessee) Blacksville Comp (Equitrans)

Ohio Pipeline Energy Network & Appalachia to Midwest (TETCO)

The Constitution Pipeline

West & East Expansions (NiSource)

Commonwealth Pipeline (UGI Service, Inergy, WGL)

TEAM 2014 (TETCO)

Nexus Gas Transmission (Spectra)

Northeast Expansion (Tennessee)

Rose Lake (Tennessee)

Page 7: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

7 Source: FERC

Summary of Natural Gas Facilities in the Marcellus & Utica Shale Basins

Page 8: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Transmission Pipeline Summary • 28 projects recently completed or under

construction, 692 miles of pipeline with a capacity of 8,478 Mmcf/day.

• Potential for 14 additional projects, 1,078 miles of pipeline and a capacity of 10,723 Mmcf/day.

• Does not include natural gas liquids pipeline projects like the Mariner East, Mariner West, Bluegrass and ATEX.

Page 9: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Constitution Pipeline

• Williams, Cabot

Piedmont, WGL

• April 2012 – Pre-filing

• July & Sept 2012 – Open houses

• Fall 2012 – FERC scoping hearings

• June 2013 – Submit 7(c) application to FERC

• Docket number: CP13-499

• June 2014 – Proposed construction start

• March 2015 – Target in-service

Page 10: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Commonwealth Pipeline

• Project currently suspended.

• 120 mile, 30” interstate pipeline. (Inergy Midstream, UGI Energy Services, WGL Holdings)

• Starts at southern terminus of Marc 1 line in Lycoming county, extending into Baltimore/DC metro.

• Capacity: 800,000 dekatherms/day (0.8 bcf)

Page 11: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Appalachian Gateway Project

• Dominion

• 110 miles of 20, 24 and 30” pipe with a capacity of 484 Mmcf/day.

• Pre-Filing Oct 2009

• FERC Approval June 2011

• In-service Oct 2012.

Page 12: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Tennessee Gas Pipeline • Kinder Morgan

• Northeast Supply Diversification

– 7 miles of new pipe, 250 Mmcf/day

– In-Service Sept-Oct 2012

• 300 Line Upgrade

– 127 miles of 30” pipeline in PA and NJ, 350 Mmcf/d

– In-Service Oct 2011

• Northeast Upgrade Project

– 40 miles of 30” pipeline in PA and NJ, 636 Mmcf/day

Page 13: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

TEAM 2014 Project

• Spectra Energy

• 34 miles of 36” pipeline, 600 Mmcf/day.

• Filed with FERC in Feb 2013

• Comments on EA until Oct 16, 2013

• Expected In-Service: Nov 2014

• FERC Docket Number: CP13-84-000

Page 14: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Pipeline Safety Act (Act 127 of 2011)

• Aka: “The Gas and Hazardous Liquids Pipelines Act”

• Passed Dec 2011. Took effect Feb 20, 2012.

• Expanded PUC’s authority to enforce federal pipeline safety laws for non-utility natural gas pipelines within the Commonwealth (Class 2, 3 and 4).

• Pipeline operators required to report the location, class, county, and aggregate miles of all pipelines transporting natural gas in PA. This is required for all pipelines, regardless of class location.

Page 15: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Class Locations • Determined by number of buildings within 220

yards on each side of pipeline per sliding mile.

• Class 1 location - 10 or fewer buildings.

• Class 2 location - more than 10 less than 46.

• Class 3 & 4 locations – more than 46 buildings and buildings with high occupancy (churches, schools, etc).

• Added layers of regulation in higher consequence areas.

Page 16: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Pipeline Safety Act (Act 127 of 2011) • Act 127 adopts all federal pipeline safety

regulations in 49 CFR except gathering pipelines in Class 1 areas (10 or fewer buildings within 220 yards in a sliding mile).

• On these lines, PUC will conduct leak-detection surveys, corrosion surveys, MAOP requirements and recordkeeping requirements as it has historically conducted with public utility pipelines.

Page 17: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Pipeline Placement Report • Report to the General Assembly in Dec 2012

by Patrick Henderson, Governor Corbett’s Energy Executive.

• Required by Act 13

• Review of regulations that

impact the placement of

natural gas gathering lines.

• List of 16 recommendations.

Page 18: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Pipeline Placement Recommendations

1,2,8. Sharing of rights-of-way and/or gathering line capacity.

6. Expand PA One Call Law to include mandatory participation of gathering line operators and location registration of pipelines.

7. Creation of a state map of unconventional natural gas pipelines.

9. Prioritized review of permits seeking to use trenchless technology for sensitive areas.

Page 19: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup
Page 20: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup
Page 21: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Directional Drilling/Trenchless Technology

Photo: Mears Group, Inc.

Page 22: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Pipeline Placement Recommendations

• 11,13,14. Expanded and enhanced public education and outreach efforts by Penn State Extension, PUC, DEP and Governor’s Center for Local Government Services with their respective stakeholder groups.

• 12, others: Increased cooperation and planning between pipeline operators and local governments, planning officials and others.

Page 23: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Proposed PA Pipeline Legislation • A review of pipeline related legislation that

has been introduced in the 2013-2014 legislative session.

• Approximately 15 bills could impact pipeline development but I’ll be discussing 8-9 that have a significant pipeline component.

• All the proposed legislation that I’ll be discussing has been introduced and referred to committee.

Page 24: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Prohibit Gathering Line Operators from Obtaining Public Utility Status

• Introduced by Rep. Phyllis Mundy as H.B. 696

• Previously H.B. 1796 in the 2011-2012 session.

• Would further define ‘gathering line’ and ‘public utility’ in the PUC Code.

• Would prohibit gathering line operators from obtaining public utility status.

• The decision to allow natural gas gathering lines would remain with the landowner.

Page 25: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Amendments to PA One Call Law • Introduced by Senator Tomlinson as S.B 1084

• Co-introduced by Rep. Matthew Baker as H.B. 1607

• Would transfer PA One Call enforcement authority from Dept. of Labor & Industry to PUC.

• Also would remove several One Call exemptions and create a Damage Prevention Committee.

Page 26: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Mandatory Participation in PA One Call System • Introduced by Senator Donald White as S.B.

1076.

• Would require participation in PA One Call to all natural gas gathering line operators.

• Would include specific location registration of all gathering lines.

Page 27: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Potential Impact Radius Disclosure • Introduced by Rep. Mike Reese as H.B. 904.

• Would require pipeline operators to include potential impact radius (PIR) information in easement agreements.

• PIR is defined as the area that could be impacted in the event of a pipeline failure.

• Determined by the diameter of the pipeline and pressure of the gas being transported.

Page 28: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

DEP Public Notification & Access to Information Act

• Introduced by Senator Dinniman as S.B 504

• Would require operators to notify property owners affected by the proposed project.

• Would require DEP to post permit applications and supporting documents online.

• Includes air quality, water allocation, water obstruction and water quality permits.

Page 29: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Pipeline Acre-for-Acre • Introduced by Senator Dinniman as S.B 506.

• Would require pipeline operators to replace impacted agriculture and conservation easements funded by taxpayers (acre-for-acre) within the same county.

• Would include additional stormwater runoff requirements on pipeline projects.

• Would apply to 1st, 2nd and 3rd class counties.

Page 30: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Condemnation Approval • Introduced by Senator Dinniman as S.B 507

• Would require the Agricultural Lands Condemnation Approval Board to approve condemnation of Act 43 farmland for FERC and PA PUC approved projects.

• Would only affect projects in 1st, 2nd and 3rd class counties.

Page 31: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Surface Owners’ Protection Act • Introduced by Senator Kusunic as S.B. 780.

• Introduced in 2011-2012 session as S.B. 1250.

• Would provide certain rights and compensation to surface owners where the mineral rights are severed.

• May not significantly change how pipelines are negotiated with the surface landowner.

Page 32: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Company to Company Integration • Introduced by Senator Yaw as S.B. 355.

• Previously introduced as S.B. 447 in the last legislative session.

• Would allow for compulsory integration of leased lands by a company holding the majority of the leased acreage.

• May help avoid overlapping or multiple gas gathering lines from competing companies in an area.

Page 33: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

PA Natural Gas Expansion and Development Initiative • Introduced by Senators Yaw and Pileggi as S.B.

738.

• Multifasceted bill to expand the utilization of natural gas in the Commonwealth.

• Would allow for the expansion of natural gas service to un-served areas, ease regulatory hurdles to becoming a public utility, and rate incentives for utilities expanding service in rural areas.

Page 34: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

• Project Updates.

• Review of Pipeline Safety Act.

• Review of Pipeline Placement Report.

• Proposed Pipeline Legislation

• Questions?

Pipeline Roundup Summary

Page 35: Pennsylvania Natural Gas Pipeline Roundup

Dave Messersmith Penn State Cooperative Extension 648 Park Street Honesdale, PA 18431 570-253-5970 x 4110 [email protected]

On Twitter: @PSUmarcellus

http://extension.psu.edu/naturalgas