It is out with the old and in with the new at the 500-acre
waterfront facility formerly known as the Sunoco Marcus Hook Refinery, now the
Marcus Hook Industrial Complex.
Workers last week ripped down aging petroleum-processing
equipment, part of a labyrinth of machinery that has produced gasoline, diesel,
and kerosene for more than a century. Other crews built cryogenic storage tanks
more than 130 feet tall with three-foot-thick walls that will hold the future:
new fuels from the prolific Marcellus Shale region.
Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P., a pipeline company that
bought the property for $60 million last year from its sister company, Sunoco
Inc., is converting the site into a major center for processing and shipping
natural gas liquids.
"We very much hope this is only the first step in this
property," said Jonathan Hunt, director of the complex. "We're
working on a lot of possible businesses. There's a lot of opportunities
here."
Business and political leaders have hailed the rebirth of
the Marcus Hook site as part of their vision of transforming the region into an
energy hub tied into the shale-gas boom.
"By literally linking Western Pennsylvania resources to
markets in Eastern Pennsylvania and beyond, this project represents the first
step in achieving that vision," Gov. Corbett said in 2012. "It has
the added benefits of creating jobs across Pennsylvania and breathing new life
into the former Marcus Hook refinery site."
But somebody neglected to sell the regional economic
benefits to West Goshen Township in Chester County, which is crossed by an
eight-inch-diameter motor-fuel pipeline that Sunoco is refurbishing to
transport the Marcellus fuel as part of the project it calls Mariner East.
Sunoco Logistics applied to local zoning officials two
months ago to build a pumping station along the underground pipeline that will
transport Marcellus ethane and propane to Marcus Hook. The pump station site,
at Boot Road and Route 202, is residentially zoned and requires a special
exception as a public utility facility.
Sunoco Logistics also applied to the Pennsylvania Public
Utility Commission to be declared a "public utility corporation,"
which would allow it to sidestep local zoning regulations in West Goshen and 30
other municipalities where it needs to build aboveground facilities along the
pipeline's 299-mile route.
Sunoco's moves have triggered an angry backlash. An
anti-Sunoco petition posted on Moveon.org has attracted more than 8,400
signatures from across the country.
The township has scheduled a public forum for Tuesday night
at West Chester East High School on Ellis Lane, where Sunoco officials are
scheduled to explain the project.
An ad hoc group of residents, Concerned Citizens of West
Goshen Township, has enlisted lawyer Lilli B. Middlebrooks to represent it at
the local zoning proceeding. It also hired Bloomsburg utility lawyer Scott J.
Rudin, who on Friday filed objections with the PUC, arguing that Sunoco
Logistics does not qualify as a public utility corporation.
The petition to be declared a public utility corporation
under Pennsylvania's business corporation law is not the same as being declared
a public utility, though the distinction is not entirely clear to residents.
As a public utility corporation, the company would acquire
certain land-use powers. But its rates would be regulated by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, not the PUC. Critics say Sunoco would get all of the
benefits of being a public utility without the burden of state oversight.
Meanwhile, the company anticipates so much growth in the
ethane market it has already begun explorations to build a second parallel
underground conduit called the Pennsylvania Pipeline from the Marcellus to
Marcus Hook. That route would require Sunoco to bury new pipe, and residents
fear the company, with public utility corporation status, would have the
authority to obtain the rights of way by eminent domain.
Sunoco has told investors it plans to begin propane
shipments on the Mariner East project by the end of this year. It asked for
expedited treatment from the PUC.
Sunoco's explanations have not reassured residents.
"These people are definitely not telling us all the truth," said Tom
Casey of West Goshen, who helped create a Facebook page, Just the Facts Please,
to rally opposition.
Adding to the suspicion is the befuddling corporate
structure of Sunoco Logistics Partners and Sunoco Inc., Philadelphia companies
that are controlled or owned outright by Energy Transfer Partners L.P., a giant
Dallas pipeline company that acquired Sunoco in 2012.
For much of its history, Sunoco Logistics' purpose was to
support the company's refining operations, delivering crude oil and taking
refined fuels to market. Now that Sunoco Inc. has retired from the refining
business, Sunoco Logistics is becoming more of an independent pipeline
operator. The shale-gas boom is providing a growth opportunity.
The "wet" gas produced from shale formations in
Western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio contains large amounts of
liquids, such as ethane and propane. Those materials are more valuable when
sold separately - ethane can be processed into an ingredient used to make
plastic - so Marcellus producers are eager to find outlets for them.
Sunoco Logistics was one of the first to recognize the
ethane market, and it committed to spending $600 million to build the Mariner
East and a similar project to transport ethane to petrochemical plants in
Sarnia, Ontario. That pipeline went into operation in late 2013.
In the Mariner East project, Sunoco plans to pump 70,000
barrels of ethane and propane a day across the state to Marcus Hook, where the
material must be chilled so it can be stored in unpressurized tanks. The ethane
will be exported, as there is no regional market for it. The propane can be
sold locally or exported.
INEOS Europe AG has signed 15-year ethane supply agreements
with two Marcellus producers and is building vessels to carry the material from
Marcus Hook to Norway. Shipments are to start in 2015.
In August, Sunoco Logistics won PUC approval setting the stage
to convert its cross-state pipeline for ethane. PUC Chairman Robert F. Powelson
endorsed the move.
"Mariner East not only links producers with new
markets, but it also represents a link between the commonwealth's citizens,
well-paying jobs, and a more independent domestic energy future," he said.
Now Powelson may be asked to play a role in a key vote on
whether Sunoco's plans can move forward.
Source: Philly.com
No comments:
Post a Comment