Plans envision Pier
122 (center, with crane) as the destination for 60,000 tons of fertilizer a
year. (Philadelphia Regional Port Authority)
|
In what could signal an energy corridor south of the Walt
Whitman Bridge, a Houston energy-transportation company has signed a long-term
lease with the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority to ship dry bulk
commodities - initially fertilizer - into Pier 122, a strategic finger pier on
the Delaware River between Packer Avenue Marine Terminal and the proposed
Southport Marine Terminal at the eastern end of the Navy Yard.
US Development Group L.L.C., which primarily uses rail to
move liquid hydrocarbons such as crude oil and ethanol from producers to end
users, such as refineries, is taking over a 20-year lease from Growmark Inc., a
Midwestern agricultural co-op that ships imported fertilizer through the Camden
port and ultimately to U.S. farmers.
Northeast Energy Terminal, a wholly owned subsidiary of
USDG, plans to build a conveyor system to connect Pier 122 to nearby
storage-silo domes.
USDG, backed by Energy Capital Partners and Goldman
Sachs, also has signed a lease with Conrail for about five acres that contain
the silo domes and have rail access.
The plan is to bring 60,000 tons of fertilizer annually
into the pier, said Robert Blackburn, Regional Port Authority (PRPA) senior
deputy executive director.
Currently, the fertilizer travels by barge from Trinidad
to Camden and is trucked to Pennsylvania and stored in the domes until it is
ready to go to distributors and farmers.
"It was important to Growmark to maintain our
fertilizer distribution there," said Rod Wells, a Growmark division
manager in Bloomington, Ill. "We felt that somebody else would have more
expertise to fully develop the site. USDG has the capability to make more of that
port facility.
"We're really good at fertilizer, and moving
fertilizer, but that facility can't make it on just fertilizer," Wells
said. "There needs to be other products, other businesses, that we just
don't have the expertise to tackle."
USDG bought the domes and a loading crane from Growmark,
with plans to grow the dry bulk commodities business, said Kevin LaBorne,
USDG's vice president of business development. Dry bulk cargoes, such as coal,
ore, grain, and road salt, are shipped in large, unpackaged amounts.
Will USDG eventually bring liquid hydrocarbons to the
Philadelphia terminal, as well?
"Anything we do in the future that involves
expansion of Pier 122, or the property there, would be done very much with the
port's support and would be complementary to their long-term development
plans," LaBorne said. "We don't have any specific plans. We are
focused right now on the dry bulk business and servicing Growmark."
But more energy-related development could be in the
offing.
In 2013, the PRPA signed a long-term lease with
Eco-Energy Inc., of Franklin, Tenn., to use the south side of Pier 124, next to
Pier 122. Eco-Energy also leased land near Pier 124 from CSX to construct a
rail and tank facility to bring ethanol by train from the Midwest.
The ethanol would be unloaded into tanks at the CSX site
and taken either by truck or pipeline to barges on the Delaware, and then to
refineries in the region, Blackburn said.
Eco-Energy plans to build a pipeline from the tank farm,
under a new road that has been built from Delaware Avenue into the Southport
site, and out to the pier on the river, Blackburn said.
Fifteen companies have expressed interest in all, or
part, of the 200 vacant acres known as Southport, which is just south of Piers
122 and 124. The PRPA is evaluating the proposals.
Among those expressing interest was Philadelphia Energy
Solutions, operator of the former Sunoco refinery, which wants to develop an
energy port with a wharf to handle oil tankers.
Philip L. Rinaldi, chief executive of Philadelphia Energy
Solutions, has said he envisions building units to produce liquid fuels from
shale gas and to make urea ammonium nitrate fertilizer from natural gas at the
refinery.
USDG, whose closest East Coast facility is in
Jacksonville, Fla., was interested in Pier 122 for "its great
location" with deep water access, a dock, multiple railroad carriers, and
proximity to I-76 and I-95, LaBorne said.
"It's a good deal for us because they bring
financial strength and a commitment to the port and connections in the dry bulk
industry that we anticipate will result in an immediate increase in dry bulk
tonnage coming into Pier 122," Blackburn said.
Under the lease terms, USDG will pay a $240,000-a-year
base rent, plus an annual Consumer Price Index increase, and additional revenue
based on the tonnage of dry bulk cargoes, the port authority said.
"We're going to grow our business there,"
USDG's LaBorne said. "It's exciting for us to be a tenant of a port that
has a vision for long-term growth, and we very much want to be part of that
growth."
Source: Philly.com
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