Editor’s Note: The information below, supplied by the Delaware Riverkeeper, appeared today in our Enviro-Events Calendar. If you have an event to publicize, send it to editor@enviropolitics.com
There is no fee for this valuable public service.

In this file photo, Liberian LNG tanker Al Hamra arrives at a port in Yokohama, southwest of Tokyo, Monday, April 21, 2014. (Koji Sasahara/AP Photo)

October 7, 2019
Public Forum:  Proposed Gibbstown LNG Export Terminal
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Cherry Hill Public Library
1100 Kings Highway North, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034
(Information supplied by the Delaware Riverkeeper)
A public forum on the Gibbstown Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) export terminal in Gloucester County, NJ will be held on Monday, October 7 in Cherry Hill, NJ to examine and discuss the operations that are proposed, the potential impacts to the environment, public health and safety, and the status of the project. Expert speakers include Fred Millar, LNG and environmental and transportation safety expert.

New Fortress Energy and Delaware River Partners are proposing to add a dock with two more shipping berths to the Gibbstown terminal’s one dock already under construction, potentially tripling the activity at the facility and requiring approximately 1,650 truck trips every day and 24-36 ship passages of loaded LNG or natural gas liquid (NGL) vessels on the Delaware River each year. Rail transport may be added and a new access road built. The Gibbstown site is located adjacent to the residential community of Gibbstown, including schools, playgrounds, and public buildings. Transport by truck and rail will require this flammable and potentially explosive cargo to be carried 125 miles or more through Pennsylvania and New Jersey communities. The highly dangerous loading of LNG directly to ships by pipes will be a continuous operation 24/7, 365 days per year. NGL will be stored on-site in an old underground cavern. The entire property is a polluted superfund site that was owned by DuPont as an explosives-manufacturing plant and by other industries that added to the pollution. More information.  Facebook Event Page  

Verified by MonsterInsights