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Under cover of Katrina…questionable oil storage plan pushed through

Salt_dome

(PHOTO: TIM ISBELL/SUN HERALD)

The Sun Herald has a series on a Dept. of Energy plan to drain millions of gallons of water from a river to dissolve the Richton Salt Dome for oil storage for expansion of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.Today’s article reports on the economic and environmental impact of the plan which has been “denounced by local officials, conservationists, scientists and
recreational users as a potential environmental and economic
catastrophe based on faulty science.”Yesterday’s article from the Sun Herald reported on how the federal government pushed the plan through under the disarray of Katrina.

The federal government wants to drain 50 million gallons of water each
day for five years from either the Leaf River or Pascagoula River to
hollow out the Richton salt dome for underground oil storage. The plan
has been criticized by local officials and conservationists, who say
the government quietly pushed it through in the disarray after Katrina.

DoE announced “its intent to explore the environmental impact” for the project just 3 days after Katrina. “The agency cancelled public
meetings in Hattiesburg and Pascagoula scheduled for early October 2005
because the meeting places had been damaged.” They were re-scheduled for 2 weeks later to be held in Jackson, MS. Conservationists and local officials claim they were left out of the process due to this…

The Sun Herald reports this on the environmental-impact report for the project –“Other than a general safety plan, little was said about the impact of
hurricanes to coastal and offshore structures and pipes outlined in the
project.”

And who performed the environmental assessment report?

None other thanICF International, the company that has performed so poorly in handling Louisiana’s Road Home program.

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