Showing posts with label Tractebel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tractebel. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2005

Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) puts On Hold a Plan to Seal a Deal for Long-term Supplies of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG)

Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) announced that it was now focusing on other potentially more viable options to meet FPL’s increasing requirements because there appears to be limited opportunity in accessing LNG at this time



Utility Co. Pulls Out Of LNG Plan


By Candia Dames

candiadames@hotmail.com

Nassau, The Bahamas

6th June 2005


Florida Power & Light Company (FPL), which was involved in a partnership with two energy firms to construct a liquefied natural gas terminal in The Bahamas, has announced that it has temporarily put on hold a plan to seal a deal for long-term supplies of LNG.


The announcement has placed the fate of one of the LNG proposals for The Bahamas on an even more uncertain path.


FPL had hoped to carry out an arrangement with El Paso Corp. and Tractebel Electricity & Gas whereby through their partnership, natural gas would have been liquefied, shipped from the source and then re-gasified for delivery to Florida.


Last December, the utility company announced that it had agreed to combine development efforts and resources with the two energy companies "in order to bring a new supply of natural gas to South Florida."


Under that plan, the three companies had planned to carryout one project.  Prior to that, Tractebel and El Paso had been pushing separate LNG proposals before The Bahamas government.


But in a recent release, FPL announced that it was now focusing on other potentially more viable options to meet FPL’s increasing requirements because there appears to be limited opportunity in accessing LNG at this time.


The Tractebel proposal had called for the construction of an LNG terminal in the Freeport Harbour while El Paso planned to build a terminal in East Grand Bahama.  But The Bahamas Environment Science and Technology Commission rejected both sites as being viable locations for the construction of LNG plants.


Government officials later indicated that the consortium was eyeing another site in Grand Bahama for the construction of the terminal.  The plan also entails laying an LNG pipeline from the northern Bahamas to Florida.


In December, El Paso spokesman, Aaron Woods, said that both El Paso and Tractebel will continue their individual efforts on the development side of each pipeline.


But he said, "Ultimately, one pipeline and one LNG facility will be built.  The companies will be participants in the ultimate project that is selected."


Although it had indicated last year that it had formed an arrangement with El Paso and Tractebel, FPL said in its recent release that none of the proposals received as a result of a request for proposals for the long-term supplies of LNG presented "sufficiently compelling reasons for FLP to proceed with its [request for proposals] at this time."


The utility company said in a release, "The lack of benefit to FPL customers and no bidders meeting all the specifications of the [request for proposals] contributed to the decision."


Terry Morrison, vice president of FPL’s energy marketing and trading organization, said in a statement, "We remain interested in LNG, but we have to know our customers will benefit before we will enter into any long-term transaction."


The announcement by FPL appeared to have left some confusion.


Mr. Woods, in an interview with The Bahama Journal from Houston, Texas last Thursday, said as far as El Paso is concerned, its agreement with FPL Group Resources, a subsidiary of FPL Group, Inc., still stands.


"FPL Group Resources, SUEZ (Tractebel) and El Paso Corporation continue to believe that having LNG and re-gasifying it there in The Bahamas providing South Florida with an alternative source of natural gas would be in the best interest of consumers in South Florida," he said.


"Based on the announcement by FPL utility, we are assessing our options and at this time, that’s all the information I have."

Thursday, December 16, 2004

LNG Project Approved

By Candia Dames

candiadames@hotmail.com

Nassau, Bahamas

16th December

 

 

 

 

Minister of Trade and Industry Leslie Miller told the Bahama Journal yesterday that the government has approved in principle the proposal submitted by the AES Corporation to build a liquefied natural gas pipeline in The Bahamas.


 

The minister was asked to respond to reports in the Trinidadian press yesterday, which quoted him announcing the approval at the IBC/Energy Caribbean conference.


"We intend to diversify and expand the economic mix which will enable us to move ahead", he said. "The environment and tourism impacts can and will be addressed and the government intends to provide the clarity and stability necessary to attract these investments."


Minister Miller's announcement came on the same day that the Tractebel and El Paso energy companies and FPL Group Resources were announcing an alliance geared at sealing the government's approval to carry out a similar project in the northern Bahamas.


Some Bahamians, particularly those who are a part of environmental groups, are worried about a possible adverse environmental impact any LNG project could have.


AES officials have tried to placate those anxieties, assuring communities in The Bahamas and South Florida that any negative impact would be negligible.


Company officials continue to point to the significant benefits that such a project would bring to The Bahamas.


According to Project Director Aaron Samson, the AES project for The Bahamas would pay $7 million a year in business license fees.


The project is also expected to create about 450 jobs during the construction phase and 25 to 35 permanent employment opportunities.


"We're convinced that this is a very finance-able project and we won't have difficulties bringing it to fruition", Mr. Samson told the Bahama Journal in an earlier interview.


Company information says AES owns or has an interest in 160 plants in 23 countries.


Local environmentalists like those belonging to the group ReEarth continue to raise concerns regarding such projects.


ReEarth spokesperson Sam Duncombe has questioned whether companies like AES choose The Bahamas for their projects because of "our country's very loose environmental laws."


"I think a lot of it is that if they choose The Bahamas they would avoid the environmental laws that they would have to adhere to in the United States", she has told the Bahama Journal.


But it is a criticism Mr. Samson has repeatedly dismissed as he pointed to the unwavering commitment that AES has to the strictest international environmental standards.


The entire project would include a liquefied natural gas import terminal; a liquefied petroleum gas removal plant; a seawater desalination plant; an undersea pipeline to supply potable water from Ocean Cay to North Bimini; as well as Ocean Cay employee housing and associated facilities on South Bimini, and an undersea natural gas supply pipeline.

Monday, March 8, 2004

The Bahamas Trade and Industry Minister, Leslie Miller says that The Government may Very Well Approve All Three Proposals to Lay Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Pipelines between The Bahamas and Florida

Minister Leslie Miller said he is "absolutely" satisfied that all of the environmental concerns raised regarding the proposed LNG projects have been addressed


Bahamas Gov't Closing Pipeline Deal

08/03/2004



Environmentalists fighting three projects to lay liquefied natural gas pipelines between The Bahamas and Florida appear to be losing that battle, with Trade and Industry Minister Leslie Miller saying Sunday that the government may very well approve all three proposals.


Minister Miller told the Bahama Journal that the AES Corporation continues to lead the race for The Bahamas Government's approval for its project, with a heads of agreement nearly finalized.


Two other companies - Tractebel and El Paso - are also moving close to convincing authorities to give them the go-ahead, the Minister said.


Minister Miller said he is "absolutely" satisfied that all of the environmental concerns raised regarding these projects have been addressed.


He also said that international professionals have already determined that the projects would pose no significant threat to the environment.


But it was recently reported in the Florida press that Tractebel, a Belgian company, was facing fines from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection for scraping, crushing or dislodging 29 corals while taking samples of the ocean in preparation for its LNG project.


Minister Miller said Minister of Health and Environment Dr. Marcus Bethel and officials at the Bahamas Environment Science and Technology Commission [BEST] have been working hard to address environmental issues raised in relation to the three proposals before the government.


But BEST Commission Chairman Keod Smith continues to be against approving any LNG project in The Bahamas, saying that the legislative framework is not yet in place.


Minister Miller on Sunday pointed out that the benefits that such projects would bring to the Bahamian people would be significant.


For each project, Minister Miller said, the government would get between $5 million and $10 million for the initial license.


In year one of any of one of the projects, the government would get $10.8 million in various fees; in year five, that figures is expected to double; in year 10, it is expected to increase to $30 million; and by year 15, the government should be getting $40 million to $50 million from a company operating an LNG facility in The Bahamas, Minister Miller said.


Meanwhile, the AES Corporation has secured a partnership with Repsol, Europe's fifth-biggest oil company, to supply liquefied natural gas for what is says will be a $700 million project.


The companies expect to officially announce the deal shortly, according to AES Project Director Aaron Samson.


Minister Miller told the Bahama Journal that the arrangement between AES and Repsol strengthens the LNG proposal.


No company produces the LNG as well as sells it, Minister Miller explained.


Mr. Samson said Friday that while the approval is preventing his company from moving forward, he is satisfied that AES will soon get the necessary permits.


When asked whether the new partnership with Repsol was an indication that AES was facing financial instability, Mr. Samson said that was certainly not the case.


"We're not a producer of LNG," he explained.  "We never purported to be a producer of LNG.  We never pretended that we'd be doing this thing alone."


Mr. Samson said the partnership with Repsol will not impact the proposal before the government in any way and that relevant government authorities have already been informed about this development.


He said Repsol would transport the LNG via ships from Trinidad to the AES site at Ocean Cay, near Bimini.  The LNG would then be turned to the gaseous form and sent through a pipeline to South Florida.


While AES awaits final approval, it continues to carry out "environmental remediation" at Ocean Cay, Mr. Samson said.


The AES pipeline, which would run from Ocean Cay, would deliver natural gas to markets in Florida, as would the other two pipelines being proposed.