January 02, 2024
By Terry L. Jones, Floodlight
WWNO - New Orleans Public Radio
Public outcry against carbon capture in
Louisiana growing
Terry L. Jones/Floodlight
A task force appointed by the Louisiana Senate
Committee on Natural Resources has held a series of meetings to gather
comments from the public, industry and experts on the local impacts of
carbon capture and sequestration. The group is tasked with submitting
a report to the Senate Committee on Natural Resources by Feb. 15.
Communities across south Louisiana want to
protect themselves from what they consider to be a risky and possibly
dangerous prospect of having tons of carbon dioxide injected
underground to reduce the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions.
Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) — capturing the planet-warming
gas from industry and storing it permanently underground — has become
a top Biden administration solution to meeting the country’s 2050
net-zero emissions goals.
Louisiana has at least 20 underground carbon dioxide storage projects
in the planning or development stages, most concentrated in the
southeastern part of the state. In addition, a sprawling network of
pipeline expansions to carry the gas is planned, many to be funded
through provisions and tax credits in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act
(IRA), which have ignited the CCS industry.
No such projects have yet been built in Louisiana. And there are
worries about the safety and efficacy of CCS after a 2020 leak of a
carbon pipeline in Satartia, Mississippi sent 45 people to the
hospital.
A state legislative task force is exploring the impacts CCS could have
in Louisiana.
But those living in lower income or majority-minority communities
worry that voices from neighborhoods that are whiter and galvanize
more quickly will have a greater say in where these projects go — or
if they will be built.
Research Plant Physiologist Dr. Mary Anne Sayer and Forest Technician
Jacob Floyd study Longleaf Pine on Palustris Experimental Forest part
of the Kisatchie National Forest, Louisiana.
Plan to stash planet-heating CO2 under US national forests alarms
critics
So far, residents from predominantly white communities have been the
only people showing up to the mid-day legislative task force meetings
at the state Capitol to express their objections to CCS.
Their criticisms are focused on a project that would inject carbon
captured from a local chemical company underneath Lake Maurepas, a
recreational estuary between Baton Rouge and New Orleans.
Randy Delatte, president-elect for Livingston Parish, told the task
force at its most recent meeting on Monday that he worries the carbon
will escape through the 52 nearby abandoned oil and gas wells.
“Our concern is Lake Maurepas,” Delatte said. “Our concern is that the
people are not being heard.”
Darren Burns, who testified during the Nov. 29 meeting, said CCS would
transform the lake into an industrial dumpsite.
“This is not clean energy; it’s dirty,” Burns said in his impassioned
plea. “Have you done your homework? This will produce more carbon than
it captures.”
Said Lisa Cothern, another defender of Lake Maurepas: “There is no
guarantee this stuff is never going to leak.”
Air Products' carbon capture facility in Port Arthur, Texas.
A known risk: How carbon stored underground could find its way back
into the atmosphere
The lack of minority voices so far in the process has Jade Woods, a
representative from the Washington, D.C.-based Center for
International Environmental Law, worried that state leaders won’t
realize how widespread opposition to CCS is in Louisiana.
“The problem we’re seeing is that some communities have more power
than others; that goes back to access to land, resources and
education,” Woods said. “There are folks on the ground who are doing a
lot of work, even if they aren’t able to show up in strong force to
some of these task force meetings. I want to make sure that doesn’t
get lost.”
Task force chairman Keith Hall said the group has been operating under
the assumption that meetings were to take place at the state Capitol
during business hours like all other legislative committees.
“None of us asked that question if we could meet later in the evening
or in other places,” said Hall, director of Louisiana State
University’s Energy Law Center. “It would be great if we had more
comments from other areas.”
Hall doesn’t think there would be time to hold additional meetings
outside of Baton Rouge given the timeframe for concluding the task
force’s work.
Provided By The 2030 Fund. First Published In
Carbon Capture & Sequestration In Louisiana, June 2023
There are more than 20 proposed carbon capture and sequestration
projects throughout Louisiana, with thousands of miles of related
carbon dioxide pipelines and related infrastructure and equipment at
carbon-emitting facilities.
Sharon Lavigne, a leader of Rise St. James, a
grassroots environmental advocacy group in her predominantly Black
community, says her neighbors are mostly unaware of how carbon capture
and sequestration works. “Lots of people don’t understand it,” she
said. “They think it’s a good thing because they don’t know the health
effects of it.”
Researchers from the state’s universities and advocates from the oil
and gas industry testified that they understand those fears but that
the potential in job creation and revenue outweigh the probability of
catastrophic events related to CCS.
“This is an opportunity to take federal money coming in and create
jobs,” said Mike Moncla, president of the Louisiana Oil and Gas
Association. “We can’t keep our talent here because there are no
jobs.”
Proposed projects are in a holding pattern as the state waits to see
if the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will grant Louisiana
permitting authority, called primacy, over the Class VI injection
wells used to store carbon dioxide underground.
But environmental advocates claim the state
doesn’t have the personnel or political will to properly regulate
injection wells, which could further harm residents in marginalized
communities already overburdened by pollution from the oil and gas
industry.
Monique Edwards, commissioner of conservation for the state’s
Department of Natural Resources, testified this week that the state
will have seven positions dedicated to Class VI inspections and eight
additional technical and field workers handling the oversight of the
state’s CCS program should primacy authority be granted.
“Our office can and will provide a (more) robust and efficient review
of the applications and the oversight of operations than the EPA can
and without sacrificing protective standards,” Edwards said in her
prepared statement.
Task force launches
The legislative task force held its first meeting in late November,
nearly three months after the body was supposed to start its work. It
is mandated to submit a full report of its findings to the Senate
Committee on Natural Resources by Feb. 15.
That short window is another concern for Woods, who fears the public
wasn’t given enough time to weigh in. But the fact that the task force
is accepting comments outside of meeting times is “a good sign.” The
public can submit written statements to snatr@legis.la.gov.
The task force is the brainchild of Republican Sen. Heather Cloud of
Turkey Creek. Her bill framed CCS as having “massive” potential for
job creation, energy production and tax revenue. A recent analysis by
the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory projected the country’s
decarbonization efforts could create more than 444,000 long-term jobs.
The task force includes Hall and another LSU
professor, attorneys specializing in environmental law or industry and
a member of the state Attorney General’s Office.
Member Greg Upton, interim director of LSU’s Center for Energy
Studies, recently testified before a congressional subcommittee that
reducing fossil fuel use would put the country’s burgeoning CCS
industry at risk by cutting available carbon.
“In my opinion, policies aimed at reducing fossil fuel supply in the
U.S. put this decarbonization strategy at risk, as investments in
decarbonizing this industrial supply chain are likely to slow if firms
anticipate reduced access to feedstocks,” Upton said.
Questions about safety loom
There are also concerns around the potential for earthquakes, groundwater
contamination and CO2
leaking back into the atmosphere through the thousands
of abandoned and unplugged oil wells already scattered throughout
Louisiana.
Lavigne speaks at town hall meetings and canvasses neighborhoods in
her community in St. James Parish to educate people on CCS. Lavigne
led a successful legal fight in 2022 against a petrochemical facility
whose expansion would have tripled the pollution rates in the region.
James Hiatt, founder of For a Better Bayou, and Kaitlyn Joshua, a
community organizer for the Power Coalition for Equity and Justice,
are doing similar outreach in the industrial-heavy, disadvantaged
communities in Lake Charles and Ascension Parish. CCS is becoming a
hot-button issue in both areas already plagued with pollution from
petrochemical and liquefied natural gas facilities.
“Everybody is skeptical of them storing whatever underground for
eternity,” Hiatt said. “It’s unknown. No one wants to be the guinea
pig.”
Hiatt, like Lavigne, says just because people from their communities
haven’t attended task force meetings doesn’t mean they are any less
concerned about the impacts carbon capture and pipeline projects will
have on their areas. Lake Charles is a more than two-hour drive from
Baton Rouge, and St. James Parish is about an hour away from the
capital city.
Joshua says holding meetings in the middle of the day at the state
Capitol feels like state leaders want to exclude voices from those
living in marginalized communities. She’s rallying parents wanting to
stop a project that would be located less than a mile from an
elementary school in Sorrento.
Lake Maurepas focus of concern
So far, the proposed project that has received the most attention and
public outcry is in southeast Louisiana.
There, chemical company Air Products hopes to drill wells into Lake
Maurepas to pump 5 million tons of carbon dioxide annually
approximately a mile underneath the lakebed instead of releasing it
into the atmosphere.
Determined to preserve the lake’s ecosystem, residents in the mostly
white rural communities surrounding it quickly gained the attention of
their legislative representatives who filed bills for the 2023 session
seeking to stop the carbon dioxide storage underneath the lake. But
none of the measures passed.
Halle Parker/WWNO
A boat filled with news media, state
officials and coastal advocates chug down the Blind River in Maurepas
Swamp during a tour on Friday, Feb. 3, 2023.
Laurie Sagnibene, a Baton Rouge resident who also owns a second home
along the lake, doesn’t feel like their voices have had much power,
citing the quick rejection of the bills aiming to protect Lake
Maurepas.
The opposition to those bills was fierce: Air Products hired 25
lobbyists ahead of this year’s session to push back against the
opposition around the Lake Maurepas project.
“We don’t have the funds that they do but we have us, as citizens, and
that should be enough,” said Sagnibene, who has attended every task
force meeting so far. “I know it’s not just us. Across the board, you
see this melting pot of Louisiana coming together who are not for it.”
Floodlight is
a non-profit newsroom that investigates the powerful interests
stalling climate action.
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