OF PIPELINES AND POWER LINES

Utah Homeowners Dismayed by Cutting Crews’ Work


By Headwaters News, 6-06-07

 
 

The issue of energy corridors and the impact on private property is increasing in the West, as growth occurs in areas where older pipelines are located and new transmission lines are under consideration to carry power produced in the Rocky Mountain West to new markets.

Two stories today – one about a pipeline route in Utah and another about a proposed power line in Montana and Idaho highlight different aspects of energy development and growth. 
In Utah, where crews are clearing trees and brush from Chevron’s pipeline route that stretches 200 miles between Rangeley, Colo., and Salt Lake City, homeowners have been surprised and dismayed to find cutting crews and felled trees in their backyards. 

The Salt Lake Tribunereported today that the pipeline has been in place since the early 1950s, but a new federal regulation that requires the entire route be visible from the air for monitoring purposes has required the removal of trees that are literally decades old.  The new rule stems from a 1999 incident in Washington where tree roots caused a gasoline pipeline to rupture, setting off an explosion that killed three and injured several others. 

Although the company Chevron hired to do the clearing was required to give homeowners two weeks’ advance notice of the work, some were apparently notified just minutes before work began.  Chevron officials said they planned to apologize to homeowners who were given little advance notice of the work.  But those officials said growth in the Utah counties that the pipeline crosses has put the tree-cutting crews directly in people’s back yards, which have taken over the empty fields and pastures that used to overlie the pipeline.

In Montana and Idaho, it’s a new transmission route that may give some landowners pause.  NorthWestern Energy wants to build a 400-mile transmission line from western Montana to southern Idaho, a plan that Ken Toole, a Montana Public Service Commission member, said could face some opposition from landowners in western Montana who might not want a power line running close to their homes.  The Associated Press reports in the Montana Standard that the 400-mile power line, supported by towers more than 100 feet high, would run from either Townsend or Garrison, through western Montana to southern Idaho.

Another power line, from Great Falls to Alberta, is also under consideration.  A project that if combined with the Montana-Idaho power line, could make a regional grid more efficient, and help electricity rates go down.



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By bearbait, 6-07-07

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