An interstate natural gas pipeline system bringing gas from eastern Canada into Maine has asked U.S. regulators for approvals necessary for a project that would marginally increase the system's capacity to bring gas to Maine and the New England market.
At issue is Portland Natural Gas Transmission System (PNGTS), a pipeline that
spans New England from the Canadian border to pipeline connections in
New Hampshire, Maine, and Massachusetts. Its facilities include 142 miles of wholly-owned mainline from an interconnection with Trans-Québec & Maritimes Pipeline Inc. at the U.S./Canada border to Westbrook, Maine plus two laterals, as well as 101 miles of mainline from Westbrook to Dracut, Massachusets, which PNGTS owns jointly with another interstate pipeline, Maritimes & Northeast Pipeline, L.L.C. PNGTS operates pursuant to a number of federal approvals, including a certificate issued by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and a Presidential Permit authorizing its facilities for importing gas from (or exporting gas to) Canada.
On December 21, PNGTS applied to the Commission for authorization for Phase I its "Westbrook Xpress Project," which would increase the certificated capacity on the northern portion of its system from Pittsburg, New Hampshire, to Westbrook, Maine, by 42.482 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d), effective November 1, 2019. The pipeline's application includes both public materials and materials that are protected against public disclosure as "controlled unclassified information", including privileged information and "critical energy infrastructure information."
In the public materials, PNGTS describes continued increased demand for natural gas: "Growing demand for natural gas for space heating, industrial processes and electric generation is driving a commensurate demand for incremental pipeline deliverability from abundant North American supply basins." PNGTS says its Westbrook XPress project "will provide access to, and allow for the transportation of, natural gas supplies from key North American supply basins such as Marcellus, Utica, and others" via Canadian pipelines. The company describes its Westbrook Xpress project is "a solution to meet this growing demand in areas of North America that have some of the highest residential gas prices in the winter." It envisions two distinct phases of the project: Phase I with an incremental 42.482 million cubic feet per day of certificated capacity, with an anticipated Phase II to bring an incremental 62.989 million cubic feet per day of capacity.
The Commission has docketed PNGTS's application for Phase I of the Westbrook XPress project as Docket No. CP19-32, and has issued public notice of the opportunity to intervene or comment through 5:00 pm Eastern Time on January 29, 2019.
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