| TheDay.com (Connecticut): 
											
											
											
											
											Blumenthal Challenges LNG Project: "Broadwater, 
											a partnership of Shell Oil and 
											TransCanada Corp., expects to file 
											its formal application by the end of 
											this month. ": 12 January 2006 
											
											Keeping gas barge details secret 
											sends up red flag, AG contends
											 
												By
											
											JUDY BENSON
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																	| Attorney 
																	General 
																	Richard 
																	Blumenthal |  |  
														
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																	|  “We 
																	don't do 
																	business 
																	that way. We 
																	don't 
																	censure what 
																	we can tell 
																	the public.” State 
																	Attorney 
																	General 
																	Richard 
																	Blumenthal
 
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																	|  “We 
																	do try to 
																	get 
																	information 
																	to those who 
																	need to see 
																	it. We are 
																	not 
																	withholding 
																	anything.” Tamara 
																	Young-Allen, 
																	spokeswoman 
																	for FERC
 
 |  
																	|  |  |  |  Health/Science/Environment Reporter
 Published 
											on 1/12/2006
 Hartford — If documents 
											describing the engineering and 
											design of a huge liquefied natural 
											gas barge proposed for Long Island 
											Sound must be kept secret to prevent 
											a terrorist attack, the project must 
											be inherently dangerous and should 
											be rejected, state Attorney General 
											Richard Blumenthal said Wednesday.
											 During a news conference, 
											Blumenthal announced he is 
											challenging a decision by federal 
											regulators to withhold from the 
											general public an engineering and 
											design report for the Broadwater 
											Energy LNG terminal. At Broadwater's 
											request, the Federal Energy 
											Regulatory Commission agreed to 
											restrict access to the documents 
											under Critical Energy Infrastructure 
											Information rules, developed as part 
											of Homeland Security measures 
											adopted by the federal government 
											after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist 
											attacks.  “Secrecy will not disarm 
											terrorists,” Blumenthal said. “It 
											will only disadvantage the public. 
											It will not guarantee safety and 
											security. It will disable efforts to 
											accurately and accountably evaluate 
											the risks. Secrecy spawns distrust. 
											Concealment signals danger.” 
											 Joining Blumenthal in 
											announcing his challenge to FERC 
											were state Sens. Leonard Fasano, 
											R-North Haven, and Andrea Stillman, 
											D-Waterford. They also criticized 
											FERC's decision to limit access to 
											information about Broadwater's plan 
											to park an LNG barge in the middle 
											of the Sound. Fasano and Stillman 
											are co-chairmen of a state task 
											force evaluating the proposal. 
											Without the engineering and design 
											information, they said, they cannot 
											conduct a complete analysis. 
											 “Broadwater has told us this 
											is not a likely terrorist target,” 
											Fasano said. “But if this 
											(disclosure of the documents) is an 
											issue of security, that puts the 
											issue of terrorism back into play. 
											You can't have it both ways.” 
											 He added that detailed 
											information about the engineering 
											and design of the terminal, such as 
											whether seawater would be used to 
											warm the super-chilled liquid gas 
											into a vapor and how storm water 
											would be treated, is essential for 
											the task force to be able to 
											determine potential environmental 
											impacts on the sound.  Blumenthal's challenge is 
											similar to one filed last month by 
											attorneys for Suffolk County, L.I., 
											which includes the communities that 
											would be closest to the LNG 
											terminal. It would be located in New 
											York waters of Long Island Sound, 
											about nine miles north of Riverhead, 
											N.Y., and 11 miles south of 
											Branford.  Connecticut officials, 
											including Gov. M. Jodi Rell, believe 
											their views should be considered in 
											FERC's review because the terminal 
											and the tankers that will supply it 
											could impact boating, fishing and 
											environmental conditions on the 
											entire waterway.  FERC has not yet made a 
											decision on Suffolk County's 
											challenge, according to Tamara 
											Young-Allen, spokeswoman for the 
											agency. FERC has been receiving 
											reports and other information from 
											Broadwater in preparation for 
											Broadwater's submission of a formal 
											application for the necessary 
											permits from the agency. While many 
											of those documents are available to 
											the public on FERC's Web site, at 
											the company's request some are not.
											 Broadwater, a partnership of 
											Shell Oil and TransCanada Corp., 
											expects to file its formal 
											application by the end of this 
											month. Company officials say the 
											terminal would hold up to 8 billion 
											cubic feet of gas and add it would 
											add 1 billion cubic feet of natural 
											gas daily to existing pipelines, 
											with three-quarters of it going to 
											New York and the rest to 
											Connecticut. Liquefied natural gas 
											to supply the terminals would come 
											on refrigeration tankers filled at 
											overseas wells.  Young-Allen said documents are 
											classified as Critical Energy 
											Infrastructure Information, or CEII, 
											when they contain sensitive material 
											about specific locations or diagrams 
											of energy equipment that could be 
											misused in the wrong hands. The 
											rules were developed after the Sept. 
											11 terrorist attacks, she said, to 
											protect the country's utilities from 
											becoming targets. Sensitive 
											information about nuclear power 
											plants and compression sites along 
											gas pipelines, for example, is 
											routinely deemed CEII.  Young-Allen emphasized that 
											unlike other agencies that use CEII, 
											FERC offers an alternative means for 
											people to gain access to the 
											information. Those who can 
											demonstrate a need to know can make 
											a formal request to FERC. In the 
											case of a request that was granted, 
											the applicant would be required to 
											sign an agreement stating that he 
											would not talk about the CEII 
											information with anyone who didn't 
											also have access to it. He could 
											submit correspondence to FERC about 
											the information as long as it alerts 
											FERC that CEII information is 
											included, Young-Allen said.  “This is a unique request,” 
											she said of the challenge from 
											Suffolk County and Blumenthal. “We 
											do try to get information to those 
											who need to see it. We are not 
											withholding anything.”  Blumenthal said the mechanism 
											available for gaining access to the 
											engineering and design report from 
											Broadwater is not adequate because 
											it would severely restrict public 
											comment about it.  “We don't do business that 
											way,” he said, adding that he 
											refuses to be muzzled. “We don't 
											censure what we can tell the 
											public.”  Secrecy is only justified, he 
											said, in cases of “very exceptional 
											national security interest involving 
											potential loss of life.” If that is 
											the case with Broadwater's 
											documents, the project shouldn't be 
											built in Long Island Sound, a busy 
											shipping and boating corridor 
											surrounded by populated areas, 
											Blumenthal said.  John Hritcko Jr., senior vice 
											president of Broadwater, said his 
											company has simply followed federal 
											procedures and that the claim that 
											keeping the documents secret signals 
											that the project poses a danger is 
											flawed. Even some information about 
											wastewater treatment plants falls 
											under CEII regulations, he said. 
											 “Does that make them less 
											safe? Absolutely not. It ensures 
											they remain safe.”  The situation, he said, is 
											comparable to a home with an 
											electronic security system. Having 
											such a system doesn't necessarily 
											mean the home is in danger. But, he 
											said, the homeowner wouldn't give 
											out the security code 
											indiscriminately.  “What they're asking us for 
											here is our pass code,” Hritcko 
											said.  At FERC, officials 
											characterized Blumenthal's 
											announcement as part of a pattern 
											that could hurt Connecticut's future 
											energy supply.  “He's opposed every energy 
											infrastructure project that's come 
											down the pike,” said spokesman Bryan 
											Lee, referring to Blumenthal's 
											objections to a gas pipeline and an 
											electrical cable across the sound. 
											“The commission is very concerned 
											that Connecticut is on the verge of 
											becoming the next California. The 
											state must develop the 
											infrastructure — power plants, 
											pipelines and new natural gas 
											supplies.”  He continued: “This is not 
											about keeping information secret. 
											This is information that's sensitive 
											that could do damage to the U.S. 
											infrastructure if it should fall 
											into the wrong hands.”  
											
											www.ferc.gov;
											
											www.broadwaterenergy.com;
											
											www.ctlng.state.ct.us/    
											
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