Office of Fossil Energy; ConocoPhillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation and Marathon Oil Company; Application for Blanket Authorization To Export Liquefied Natural Gas, 10507-10509 [E7-4162]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 45 / Thursday, March 8, 2007 / Notices
The potential costs associated with
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
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10507
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Oil and Gas Global
Security and Supply, Office of Fossil
Energy, U.S. Department of Energy,
Forrestal Building, Room 3E–042, FE–
34, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Larine Moore or Beverly Howard, Office
of Oil and Gas Global Security and
Supply, Office of Fossil Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy, Forrestal
Building, Room 3E–042, FE–34, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. (202) 586–
9478; (202) 586–9387.
Edward Myers, Office of the Assistant
General Counsel for Fossil Energy and
Energy Efficiency, U.S. Department of
Energy, Forrestal Building, Room 6B–
159, 1000 Independence Ave., SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. (202) 586–
3397.
[FE Docket No. 07–02–LNG]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Office of Fossil Energy;
ConocoPhillips Alaska Natural Gas
Corporation and Marathon Oil
Company; Application for Blanket
Authorization To Export Liquefied
Natural Gas
Background
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number 84.215L, Smaller Learning
Communities Program.)
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 7249.
Dated: March 2, 2007.
Raymond Simon,
Deputy Secretary of Education Delegated the
Authority to Perform the Functions of the
Assistant Secretary for Elementary and
Secondary Education.
[FR Doc. E7–4228 Filed 3–7–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
Office of Fossil Energy, DOE.
Notice of application.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Office of Fossil Energy
(FE) of the Department of Energy (DOE)
gives notice of receipt of an application
filed jointly on January 10, 2007 by
ConocoPhillips Alaska Natural Gas
Corporation (CPANGC) and Marathon
Oil Company (Marathon), requesting
blanket authorization to export on their
own behalf or as agents for others on a
short-term or spot market basis from
existing facilities near Kenai, Alaska up
to 99 Trillion British thermal units
(TBtu’s) (approximately 99 Billion cubic
feet (Bcf)) of liquefied natural gas (LNG)
to Japan and/or one or more countries
on either side of the Pacific Rim over a
two year period commencing April 1,
2009 and terminating March 31, 2011.
The application is filed under section
3 of the Natural Gas Act (15 U.S.C.
717b), as amended by section 201 of the
Energy Policy Act of 1992 (Pub. L. 102–
486), and DOE Delegation Order No. 00–
002.00G (Jan. 29, 2007) and DOE
Redelegation Order No. 00–002.04C
(Jan. 30, 2007). Protests, motions to
intervene, notices of intervention, and
written comments are invited.
DATES: Protests, motions to intervene or
notices of intervention, as applicable,
requests for additional procedures, and
written comments are to be filed at the
address listed below no later than 4:30
p.m., eastern time, April 9, 2007.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
ADDRESSES:
CPANGC, a Delaware corporation
with its principal place of business in
Anchorage, Alaska, is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of ConocoPhillips Company,
a publicly traded Delaware corporation.
Marathon is an Ohio corporation with
its principal place of business in
Houston, Texas. CPANGC and Marathon
are not affiliated with each other. The
applicants are joint indirect owners of
natural gas liquefaction and marine
terminal facilities near Kenai, Alaska
(Kenai LNG Facility) on Cook Inlet in
Southcentral Alaska.1
Existing Long-Term Authorization
The applicants hold an existing longterm authorization to export LNG to
Japan granted to CPANGC predecessor
Phillips Petroleum Company (Phillips)
and Marathon by the Federal Power
Commission in 1967.2 Phillips and
Marathon were specifically authorized
to export LNG from the State of Alaska
to supply Tokyo Electric Power
Company Inc. (Tokyo Electric) and
Tokyo Gas Company Limited (Tokyo
Gas) for a 15-year period terminating on
May 31, 1984. The order also authorized
Phillips and Marathon to construct the
necessary liquefaction and marine
terminal facilities in the Cook Inlet
Basin near Kenai, Alaska. The long-term
export authorization was subsequently
amended and extended by the Economic
1 The Kenai LNG Facility is owned by the Kenai
LNG Corporation. CPANGC has a 70-percent
ownership interest and Marathon has a 30-percent
ownership interest in Kenai LNG Corporation.
2 See, Phillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation
and Marathon Oil Company, 37 FPC 777 (April 19,
1967).
E:\FR\FM\08MRN1.SGM
08MRN1
10508
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 45 / Thursday, March 8, 2007 / Notices
Regulatory Administration (ERA) at
various times between 1982 and 1987.3
On July 28, 1988, ERA granted
CPANGC, then known as Phillips 66
Natural Gas Company, and Marathon an
extension of the long-term authorization
to export LNG to Japan for a term of 15
years, ending March 31, 2004. FE
subsequently approved amendments of
the long-term authorization at various
times between 1991 and 1995.4
On April 2, 1999, in DOE/FE Order
No. 1473, FE granted CPANGC
predecessor Phillips Alaska Natural Gas
Corporation (PANGC) and Marathon a
further five-year extension of the longterm authorization to annually export
up to 64.4 TBtu’s of LNG to Japan
commencing April 1, 2004 through
March 31, 2009.5 The commencement
date proposed by the applicants for the
blanket export authorization coincides
with the anticipated termination of the
applicants’ currently effective long-term
authorization issued in Order No. 1473.
On June 20, 2000, FE granted PANGC
and Marathon approval of a revision in
the pricing provisions of their Japanese
sales contracts.6
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
Existing Blanket Authorization
On April 10, 2000, in DOE/FE Order
No. 1580, FE granted PANGC and
Marathon blanket authorization to
export up to 10 TBtu’s (10 Bcf) of LNG
from the Kenai LNG facility to
international markets in the Pacific Rim
over a two year period beginning on the
date of the first export.7 Although this
blanket authorization was intended to
3 See, DOE/ERA Opinion and Order No. 49 (1
ERA ¶ 70, 116, December 14, 1982) (extended
export authority); DOE/ERA Opinion and Order
No.49–A (1 ERA ¶‘‘70,127, April 3, 1986)
(transferred authorization from Phillips Petroleum
Company to Phillips 66 Natural Gas Company);
DOE/ERA Opinion and Order No. 206 (1 ERA
¶‘‘70,128, November 16, 1987) (amended pricing
formula).
4 See, DOE/ERA Opinion and Order No. 261 (1
ERA ¶ 70,130, July 28, 1988) (extended export
authority); DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261–A
(1 FE ¶‘‘70,454, June 18, 1991) (amended pricing
formula); DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261–B (1
FE ¶70, 506, December 19, 1991) (transferred
authorization from Phillips 66 Natural Gas
Company to PANGC); DOE/FE Opinion and Order
No. 261–C (1 FE ¶‘‘70,607, July 15, 1992) (increased
annual contract quantity from 52 trillion Btu’s to
64.4 trillion Btu’s—the provision for yearly sales up
to 106 percent of annual contract quantity remained
unchanged); DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261–
D (1 FE ¶‘‘71,087, March 2, 1995) (amended pricing
formula); DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261–E (2
FE ¶ 71,429, July 18, 1997) (dismissed complaint).
5 See, Phillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation
and Marathon Oil Company, DOE/FE Opinion and
Order No. 1473 (2 FE ¶ 70,317, April 2, 1999).
6 See, DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261–F (2
FE ¶ 70,506, June 20, 2000) (amended pricing
provisions of Japanese sales contracts).
7 See, Phillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation
and Marathon Oil Company, DOE/FE Opinion and
Order No. 1580 (2 FE ¶ 70,472, April 10, 2000).
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18:53 Mar 07, 2007
Jkt 211001
supplement the long term authorization
issued in DOE/FE Order No. 1473, the
blanket authorization issued in DOE/FE
Order No. 1580 has not been activated
to date and no exports of LNG under
this blanket authorization have been
made.
Current Application
In the instant application, the
applicants initially requested that FE
vacate the blanket authorization issued
in DOE/FE Order No. 1580
contemporaneous with, and conditioned
on, the issuance of the proposed blanket
authorization sought in this application.
However, by letter dated February 16,
2007, the applicants subsequently
notified DOE that they are
contemplating the activation of the
blanket authorization issued in DOE/FE
Order No. 1580. The applicants further
state in the February 16 letter that if
they activate the Order No. 1580 blanket
authorization before the Department
issues a favorable order in the instant
proceeding, it will not be necessary for
the Department to vacate the Order No.
1580 authorization. Alternatively, the
applicants state that if the Department
issues a favorable order herein before
the applicants activate the Order No.
1580 authorization, then the applicants
seek to reserve the ability to activate the
Order No. 1580 authorization prior to
the time period covered by the instant
application.
Public Interest Considerations
In support of their application,
CPANGC and Marathon state there is no
regional need for the volume of LNG
that they seek authority to export during
the two year time period of the
proposed authorization. The applicants
commissioned separate studies by two
independent consulting firms,
Netherland, Sewell & Associates (NSAI)
and Resource Decisions (RD), to assist in
determining the regional need for the
natural gas proposed to be exported as
LNG. The NSAI study evaluates natural
gas reserves in the Cook Inlet region of
Alaska and the RD study provides an
analysis of the available supply and the
effective demand for Cook Inlet natural
gas during the term of the proposed
blanket authorization. The RD study, in
particular, postulates ‘‘Expected Cases’’
and ‘‘Stress Cases’’ for natural gas
supply and demand in Southcentral
Alaska in order to discern the possible
impact of the export of LNG on regional
need from 2006 through the first quarter
of 2011. The applicants state the
Expected Demand Case employs the
most likely estimates for Southcentral
Alaska natural gas demand and the
Expected Supply Case employs the most
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
likely estimates for Cook Inlet natural
gas supply. The Stress Demand Case, on
the other hand, reportedly employs
regional natural gas demand
assumptions that are higher than
expected and the Stress Supply Case
employs Cook Inlet natural gas supply
assumptions that are lower than
expected. The applicants project that
under all of the analyzed scenarios,
there are sufficient supplies of natural
gas and other energy sources to meet
both the regional demand of
Southcentral Alaska and the foreign
export market during the two year
period of the proposed export
authorization.8
With respect to national need,
CPANGC and Marathon state that
shipment of LNG from the applicants’
Kenai LNG facilities to the lower 48
states does not appear to be a viable
option due to certain regulatory and
economic hurdles. The applicants
emphasize that the requirements of
Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act
of 1920 (46 U.S.C. 883), commonly
known as the Jones Act, would present
a substantial regulatory hurdle. The
applicants also emphasize that there are
no existing U.S. west coast LNG
receiving terminals and the cost of
shipping Kenai LNG to U.S. east coast
or Gulf Coast LNG receiving terminals
would vastly exceed the cost of
transporting the same LNG to Japan
and/or another customer in the Pacific
Rim due to the distances involved.
The applicants assert that approval of
the requested authorization to export
Cook Inlet LNG from Kenai to Japan
and/or one or more countries on either
side of the Pacific Rim will provide
tangible benefits to the Alaskan
economy and to U.S. national interests.
The applicants maintain that the Kenai
LNG Facility provides a stable source of
income and employment in
Southcentral Alaska, an area noted for
seasonal unemployment and a marked
cyclical response to world oil price
changes. The operation of the Kenai
LNG Facility reportedly provides
employment generating an estimated
$15.9 million dollars in personal
income.9 The State of Alaska and its
citizens also benefit from royalty
payments on the LNG and from
production and corporate income tax
receipts. The applicants assert that a
8 See Resource Decisions, Economic Analysis of
Kenai LNG Export (January 2007) included as
Appendix C to the application of CPANGC and
Marathon filed January 10, 2007; and Netherland,
Sewell & Associates report evaluating natural gas
reserves in the Cook Inlet region of Alaska (January
4, 2007), included as Appendix D to the application
of CPANGC and Marathon filed January 10, 2007.
9 In 2005 dollars.
E:\FR\FM\08MRN1.SGM
08MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 45 / Thursday, March 8, 2007 / Notices
denial of the application will lead to the
end of LNG exports from the Kenai LNG
Facility by early 2009, resulting in a
major loss in benefits to the State of
Alaska. The applicants further assert
that shutdown of the Kenai LNG Facility
would cause a shut-in of the flowing gas
supplies that would otherwise be
produced from the Cook Inlet reservoirs
and could result in permanent loss of
natural gas reserves and deliverability.
In this regard, the applicants maintain
that once flowing wells are shut-in,
there is no guarantee that those supplies
will be available in the future at the
same rate of production or that reserves
will not be lost permanently. Finally,
CPANGC and Marathon note the
beneficial impact of the exportation of
LNG on the balance of payments
between the U.S. and Pacific Rim
countries during the two year term of
the proposed blanket authorization.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
DOE/FE Evaluation
This export application will be
reviewed pursuant to section 3 of the
Natural Gas Act, as amended, and the
authority contained in DOE Delegation
Order No. 00–002.00G (Jan. 29, 2007)
and DOE Redelegation Order No. 00–
002.04C (Jan. 30, 2007). In reviewing
LNG exports, DOE considers domestic
need for the gas and any other issue
determined to be appropriate, including
whether the arrangement is consistent
with DOE’s policy of promoting
competition in the marketplace by
allowing commercial parties to freely
negotiate their own trade arrangements.
Parties that may oppose this application
should comment in their responses on
these issues. CPANGC and Marathon
assert the proposed authorization is in
the public interest. Under section 3 of
the Natural Gas Act, as amended, an
export from the United States to a
foreign country must be authorized
unless ‘‘the proposed exportation will
not be consistent with the public
interest.’’ Section 3 thus creates a
statutory presumption in favor of
approval of this application, and parties
opposing the authorization bear the
burden of overcoming this presumption.
The National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.,
requires DOE to give appropriate
consideration to the environmental
effects of its proposed decisions. No
final decision will be issued in this
proceeding until DOE has met its NEPA
responsibilities.
Public Comment Procedures
In response to this notice, any person
may file a protest, motion to intervene
or notice of intervention, as applicable,
and written comments. Any person
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18:53 Mar 07, 2007
Jkt 211001
wishing to become a party to the
proceeding and to have their written
comments considered as a basis for any
decision on the application must file a
motion to intervene or notice of
intervention, as applicable. The filing of
a protest with respect to the application
will not serve to make the protestant a
party to the proceeding, although
protests and comments received from
persons who are not parties will be
considered in determining the
appropriate action to be taken on the
application. All protests, motions to
intervene, notices of intervention, and
written comments must meet the
requirements specified by the
regulations in 10 CFR part 590. Protests,
motions to intervene, notices of
intervention, requests for additional
procedures, and written comments
should be filed with the Office of Oil
and Gas Global Security and Supply at
the address listed above.
A decisional record on the application
will be developed through responses to
this notice by parties, including the
parties’ written comments and replies
thereto. Additional procedures will be
used as necessary to achieve a complete
understanding of the facts and issues. A
party seeking intervention may request
that additional procedures be provided,
such as additional written comments, an
oral presentation, a conference, or trialtype hearing. Any request to file
additional written comments should
explain why they are necessary. Any
request for an oral presentation should
identify the substantial question of fact,
law, or policy at issue, show that it is
material and relevant to a decision in
the proceeding, and demonstrate why
an oral presentation is needed. Any
request for a conference should
demonstrate why the conference would
materially advance the proceeding. Any
request for a trial-type hearing must
show that there are factual issues
genuinely in dispute that are relevant
and material to a decision and that a
trial-type hearing is necessary for a full
and true disclosure of the facts.
If an additional procedure is
scheduled, notice will be provided to all
parties. If no party requests additional
procedures, a final opinion and order
may be issued based on the official
record, including the application and
responses filed by parties pursuant to
this notice, in accordance with 10 CFR
590.316.
The application filed by CPANGC and
Marathon is available for inspection and
copying in the Office of Oil and Gas
Global Security and Supply docket
room, 3E–042, at the above address. The
docket room is open between the hours
of 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
10509
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
The application is also available
electronically by going to the following
Web address: https://www.fe.doe.gov/
programs/gasregulation/.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 2,
2007.
Robert F. Corbin,
Manager, Natural Gas Regulatory Activities,
Office of Oil and Gas Global Security and
Supply, Office of Fossil Energy.
[FR Doc. E7–4162 Filed 3–7–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. RP00–632–022]
Dominion Transmission, Inc.; Notice of
Compliance Filing
March 2, 2007.
Take notice that on February 20, 2007,
Dominion Transmission, Inc. (DTI)
tendered for filing its addendum to the
2006 informational fuel report filed with
the Commission on June 30, 2006 in
Docket No. RP00–632–021.
Any person desiring to protest this
filing must file in accordance with Rule
211 of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice and Procedure (18 CFR
385.211). Protests to this filing will be
considered by the Commission in
determining the appropriate action to be
taken, but will not serve to make
protestants parties to the proceeding.
Such protests must be filed on or before
the date as indicated below. Anyone
filing a protest must serve a copy of that
document on all the parties to the
proceeding.
The Commission encourages
electronic submission of protests in lieu
of paper using the ‘‘eFiling’’ link at
https://www.ferc.gov. Persons unable to
file electronically should submit an
original and 14 copies of the protest to
the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426.
This filing is accessible on-line at
https://www.ferc.gov, using the
‘‘eLibrary’’ link and is available for
review in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room in Washington, DC.
There is an ‘‘eSubscription’’ link on the
Web site that enables subscribers to
receive e-mail notification when a
document is added to a subscribed
docket(s). For assistance with any FERC
Online service, please e-mail
FERCOnlineSupport@ferc.gov, or call
(866) 208–3676 (toll free). For TTY, call
(202) 502–8659.
E:\FR\FM\08MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 45 (Thursday, March 8, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 10507-10509]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-4162]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
[FE Docket No. 07-02-LNG]
Office of Fossil Energy; ConocoPhillips Alaska Natural Gas
Corporation and Marathon Oil Company; Application for Blanket
Authorization To Export Liquefied Natural Gas
AGENCY: Office of Fossil Energy, DOE.
ACTION: Notice of application.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Office of Fossil Energy (FE) of the Department of Energy
(DOE) gives notice of receipt of an application filed jointly on
January 10, 2007 by ConocoPhillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation
(CPANGC) and Marathon Oil Company (Marathon), requesting blanket
authorization to export on their own behalf or as agents for others on
a short-term or spot market basis from existing facilities near Kenai,
Alaska up to 99 Trillion British thermal units (TBtu's) (approximately
99 Billion cubic feet (Bcf)) of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Japan
and/or one or more countries on either side of the Pacific Rim over a
two year period commencing April 1, 2009 and terminating March 31,
2011.
The application is filed under section 3 of the Natural Gas Act (15
U.S.C. 717b), as amended by section 201 of the Energy Policy Act of
1992 (Pub. L. 102-486), and DOE Delegation Order No. 00-002.00G (Jan.
29, 2007) and DOE Redelegation Order No. 00-002.04C (Jan. 30, 2007).
Protests, motions to intervene, notices of intervention, and written
comments are invited.
DATES: Protests, motions to intervene or notices of intervention, as
applicable, requests for additional procedures, and written comments
are to be filed at the address listed below no later than 4:30 p.m.,
eastern time, April 9, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Office of Oil and Gas Global Security and Supply, Office of
Fossil Energy, U.S. Department of Energy, Forrestal Building, Room 3E-
042, FE-34, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Larine Moore or Beverly Howard, Office of Oil and Gas Global Security
and Supply, Office of Fossil Energy, U.S. Department of Energy,
Forrestal Building, Room 3E-042, FE-34, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. (202) 586-9478; (202) 586-9387.
Edward Myers, Office of the Assistant General Counsel for Fossil Energy
and Energy Efficiency, U.S. Department of Energy, Forrestal Building,
Room 6B-159, 1000 Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20585. (202)
586-3397.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
CPANGC, a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business
in Anchorage, Alaska, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of ConocoPhillips
Company, a publicly traded Delaware corporation. Marathon is an Ohio
corporation with its principal place of business in Houston, Texas.
CPANGC and Marathon are not affiliated with each other. The applicants
are joint indirect owners of natural gas liquefaction and marine
terminal facilities near Kenai, Alaska (Kenai LNG Facility) on Cook
Inlet in Southcentral Alaska.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Kenai LNG Facility is owned by the Kenai LNG
Corporation. CPANGC has a 70-percent ownership interest and Marathon
has a 30-percent ownership interest in Kenai LNG Corporation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Existing Long-Term Authorization
The applicants hold an existing long-term authorization to export
LNG to Japan granted to CPANGC predecessor Phillips Petroleum Company
(Phillips) and Marathon by the Federal Power Commission in 1967.\2\
Phillips and Marathon were specifically authorized to export LNG from
the State of Alaska to supply Tokyo Electric Power Company Inc. (Tokyo
Electric) and Tokyo Gas Company Limited (Tokyo Gas) for a 15-year
period terminating on May 31, 1984. The order also authorized Phillips
and Marathon to construct the necessary liquefaction and marine
terminal facilities in the Cook Inlet Basin near Kenai, Alaska. The
long-term export authorization was subsequently amended and extended by
the Economic
[[Page 10508]]
Regulatory Administration (ERA) at various times between 1982 and
1987.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See, Phillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation and Marathon
Oil Company, 37 FPC 777 (April 19, 1967).
\3\ See, DOE/ERA Opinion and Order No. 49 (1 ERA ] 70, 116,
December 14, 1982) (extended export authority); DOE/ERA Opinion and
Order No.49-A (1 ERA ]``70,127, April 3, 1986) (transferred
authorization from Phillips Petroleum Company to Phillips 66 Natural
Gas Company); DOE/ERA Opinion and Order No. 206 (1 ERA ]``70,128,
November 16, 1987) (amended pricing formula).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 28, 1988, ERA granted CPANGC, then known as Phillips 66
Natural Gas Company, and Marathon an extension of the long-term
authorization to export LNG to Japan for a term of 15 years, ending
March 31, 2004. FE subsequently approved amendments of the long-term
authorization at various times between 1991 and 1995.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See, DOE/ERA Opinion and Order No. 261 (1 ERA ] 70,130, July
28, 1988) (extended export authority); DOE/FE Opinion and Order No.
261-A (1 FE ]``70,454, June 18, 1991) (amended pricing formula);
DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261-B (1 FE ]70, 506, December 19,
1991) (transferred authorization from Phillips 66 Natural Gas
Company to PANGC); DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261-C (1 FE
]``70,607, July 15, 1992) (increased annual contract quantity from
52 trillion Btu's to 64.4 trillion Btu's--the provision for yearly
sales up to 106 percent of annual contract quantity remained
unchanged); DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261-D (1 FE ]``71,087,
March 2, 1995) (amended pricing formula); DOE/FE Opinion and Order
No. 261-E (2 FE ] 71,429, July 18, 1997) (dismissed complaint).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On April 2, 1999, in DOE/FE Order No. 1473, FE granted CPANGC
predecessor Phillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation (PANGC) and
Marathon a further five-year extension of the long-term authorization
to annually export up to 64.4 TBtu's of LNG to Japan commencing April
1, 2004 through March 31, 2009.\5\ The commencement date proposed by
the applicants for the blanket export authorization coincides with the
anticipated termination of the applicants' currently effective long-
term authorization issued in Order No. 1473.
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\5\ See, Phillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation and Marathon
Oil Company, DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 1473 (2 FE ] 70,317, April
2, 1999).
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On June 20, 2000, FE granted PANGC and Marathon approval of a
revision in the pricing provisions of their Japanese sales
contracts.\6\
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\6\ See, DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 261-F (2 FE ] 70,506, June
20, 2000) (amended pricing provisions of Japanese sales contracts).
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Existing Blanket Authorization
On April 10, 2000, in DOE/FE Order No. 1580, FE granted PANGC and
Marathon blanket authorization to export up to 10 TBtu's (10 Bcf) of
LNG from the Kenai LNG facility to international markets in the Pacific
Rim over a two year period beginning on the date of the first
export.\7\ Although this blanket authorization was intended to
supplement the long term authorization issued in DOE/FE Order No. 1473,
the blanket authorization issued in DOE/FE Order No. 1580 has not been
activated to date and no exports of LNG under this blanket
authorization have been made.
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\7\ See, Phillips Alaska Natural Gas Corporation and Marathon
Oil Company, DOE/FE Opinion and Order No. 1580 (2 FE ] 70,472, April
10, 2000).
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Current Application
In the instant application, the applicants initially requested that
FE vacate the blanket authorization issued in DOE/FE Order No. 1580
contemporaneous with, and conditioned on, the issuance of the proposed
blanket authorization sought in this application. However, by letter
dated February 16, 2007, the applicants subsequently notified DOE that
they are contemplating the activation of the blanket authorization
issued in DOE/FE Order No. 1580. The applicants further state in the
February 16 letter that if they activate the Order No. 1580 blanket
authorization before the Department issues a favorable order in the
instant proceeding, it will not be necessary for the Department to
vacate the Order No. 1580 authorization. Alternatively, the applicants
state that if the Department issues a favorable order herein before the
applicants activate the Order No. 1580 authorization, then the
applicants seek to reserve the ability to activate the Order No. 1580
authorization prior to the time period covered by the instant
application.
Public Interest Considerations
In support of their application, CPANGC and Marathon state there is
no regional need for the volume of LNG that they seek authority to
export during the two year time period of the proposed authorization.
The applicants commissioned separate studies by two independent
consulting firms, Netherland, Sewell & Associates (NSAI) and Resource
Decisions (RD), to assist in determining the regional need for the
natural gas proposed to be exported as LNG. The NSAI study evaluates
natural gas reserves in the Cook Inlet region of Alaska and the RD
study provides an analysis of the available supply and the effective
demand for Cook Inlet natural gas during the term of the proposed
blanket authorization. The RD study, in particular, postulates
``Expected Cases'' and ``Stress Cases'' for natural gas supply and
demand in Southcentral Alaska in order to discern the possible impact
of the export of LNG on regional need from 2006 through the first
quarter of 2011. The applicants state the Expected Demand Case employs
the most likely estimates for Southcentral Alaska natural gas demand
and the Expected Supply Case employs the most likely estimates for Cook
Inlet natural gas supply. The Stress Demand Case, on the other hand,
reportedly employs regional natural gas demand assumptions that are
higher than expected and the Stress Supply Case employs Cook Inlet
natural gas supply assumptions that are lower than expected. The
applicants project that under all of the analyzed scenarios, there are
sufficient supplies of natural gas and other energy sources to meet
both the regional demand of Southcentral Alaska and the foreign export
market during the two year period of the proposed export
authorization.\8\
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\8\ See Resource Decisions, Economic Analysis of Kenai LNG
Export (January 2007) included as Appendix C to the application of
CPANGC and Marathon filed January 10, 2007; and Netherland, Sewell &
Associates report evaluating natural gas reserves in the Cook Inlet
region of Alaska (January 4, 2007), included as Appendix D to the
application of CPANGC and Marathon filed January 10, 2007.
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With respect to national need, CPANGC and Marathon state that
shipment of LNG from the applicants' Kenai LNG facilities to the lower
48 states does not appear to be a viable option due to certain
regulatory and economic hurdles. The applicants emphasize that the
requirements of Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 (46
U.S.C. 883), commonly known as the Jones Act, would present a
substantial regulatory hurdle. The applicants also emphasize that there
are no existing U.S. west coast LNG receiving terminals and the cost of
shipping Kenai LNG to U.S. east coast or Gulf Coast LNG receiving
terminals would vastly exceed the cost of transporting the same LNG to
Japan and/or another customer in the Pacific Rim due to the distances
involved.
The applicants assert that approval of the requested authorization
to export Cook Inlet LNG from Kenai to Japan and/or one or more
countries on either side of the Pacific Rim will provide tangible
benefits to the Alaskan economy and to U.S. national interests. The
applicants maintain that the Kenai LNG Facility provides a stable
source of income and employment in Southcentral Alaska, an area noted
for seasonal unemployment and a marked cyclical response to world oil
price changes. The operation of the Kenai LNG Facility reportedly
provides employment generating an estimated $15.9 million dollars in
personal income.\9\ The State of Alaska and its citizens also benefit
from royalty payments on the LNG and from production and corporate
income tax receipts. The applicants assert that a
[[Page 10509]]
denial of the application will lead to the end of LNG exports from the
Kenai LNG Facility by early 2009, resulting in a major loss in benefits
to the State of Alaska. The applicants further assert that shutdown of
the Kenai LNG Facility would cause a shut-in of the flowing gas
supplies that would otherwise be produced from the Cook Inlet
reservoirs and could result in permanent loss of natural gas reserves
and deliverability. In this regard, the applicants maintain that once
flowing wells are shut-in, there is no guarantee that those supplies
will be available in the future at the same rate of production or that
reserves will not be lost permanently. Finally, CPANGC and Marathon
note the beneficial impact of the exportation of LNG on the balance of
payments between the U.S. and Pacific Rim countries during the two year
term of the proposed blanket authorization.
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\9\ In 2005 dollars.
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DOE/FE Evaluation
This export application will be reviewed pursuant to section 3 of
the Natural Gas Act, as amended, and the authority contained in DOE
Delegation Order No. 00-002.00G (Jan. 29, 2007) and DOE Redelegation
Order No. 00-002.04C (Jan. 30, 2007). In reviewing LNG exports, DOE
considers domestic need for the gas and any other issue determined to
be appropriate, including whether the arrangement is consistent with
DOE's policy of promoting competition in the marketplace by allowing
commercial parties to freely negotiate their own trade arrangements.
Parties that may oppose this application should comment in their
responses on these issues. CPANGC and Marathon assert the proposed
authorization is in the public interest. Under section 3 of the Natural
Gas Act, as amended, an export from the United States to a foreign
country must be authorized unless ``the proposed exportation will not
be consistent with the public interest.'' Section 3 thus creates a
statutory presumption in favor of approval of this application, and
parties opposing the authorization bear the burden of overcoming this
presumption.
The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq., requires DOE to give appropriate consideration to the
environmental effects of its proposed decisions. No final decision will
be issued in this proceeding until DOE has met its NEPA
responsibilities.
Public Comment Procedures
In response to this notice, any person may file a protest, motion
to intervene or notice of intervention, as applicable, and written
comments. Any person wishing to become a party to the proceeding and to
have their written comments considered as a basis for any decision on
the application must file a motion to intervene or notice of
intervention, as applicable. The filing of a protest with respect to
the application will not serve to make the protestant a party to the
proceeding, although protests and comments received from persons who
are not parties will be considered in determining the appropriate
action to be taken on the application. All protests, motions to
intervene, notices of intervention, and written comments must meet the
requirements specified by the regulations in 10 CFR part 590. Protests,
motions to intervene, notices of intervention, requests for additional
procedures, and written comments should be filed with the Office of Oil
and Gas Global Security and Supply at the address listed above.
A decisional record on the application will be developed through
responses to this notice by parties, including the parties' written
comments and replies thereto. Additional procedures will be used as
necessary to achieve a complete understanding of the facts and issues.
A party seeking intervention may request that additional procedures be
provided, such as additional written comments, an oral presentation, a
conference, or trial-type hearing. Any request to file additional
written comments should explain why they are necessary. Any request for
an oral presentation should identify the substantial question of fact,
law, or policy at issue, show that it is material and relevant to a
decision in the proceeding, and demonstrate why an oral presentation is
needed. Any request for a conference should demonstrate why the
conference would materially advance the proceeding. Any request for a
trial-type hearing must show that there are factual issues genuinely in
dispute that are relevant and material to a decision and that a trial-
type hearing is necessary for a full and true disclosure of the facts.
If an additional procedure is scheduled, notice will be provided to
all parties. If no party requests additional procedures, a final
opinion and order may be issued based on the official record, including
the application and responses filed by parties pursuant to this notice,
in accordance with 10 CFR 590.316.
The application filed by CPANGC and Marathon is available for
inspection and copying in the Office of Oil and Gas Global Security and
Supply docket room, 3E-042, at the above address. The docket room is
open between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The application is also available
electronically by going to the following Web address: https://
www.fe.doe.gov/programs/gasregulation/.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 2, 2007.
Robert F. Corbin,
Manager, Natural Gas Regulatory Activities, Office of Oil and Gas
Global Security and Supply, Office of Fossil Energy.
[FR Doc. E7-4162 Filed 3-7-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P