Showing posts with label Federal Goverment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Federal Goverment. Show all posts

November 11, 2009

Camelina Biodiesel Fed Approved

MONTANA, Nov 11 2009 (Neo Natura) - Camelina companies say federal officials have approved the use of meal from the biofuels crop as a 10 percent supplement in cattle feed — a development that could boost the prospects for Montana's fledgling camelina industry.

Two companies, Great Plains Oil & Exploration and Sustainable Oils, have been working in recent years to develop a market for camelina for use as a replacement for jet fuel or diesel.

The crop grows well in Montana's arid soils, but farmers have been reluctant to switch over from wheat and other traditional crops.

Now the Food and Drug Administration has approved the use of meal from the plant's crushed seeds for use in cattle feed. That could make biofuels production more profitable, by creating a potential market for one of the crop's byproducts.

Great Plains Oil and Exploration has also leased a Montola plant in Culbertson for seed storage after its owners failed to pay farmers for crops grown under contract.

The plant was owned by Sustainable Systems, a Missoula renewable-fuels company that contracted for oilseed in 2008 at premium prices. The company didn't obtain bank loans to pay for seed and remain operational, according to the annual report of Sustainable Systems' parent company, Greenshift Corp.

Sustainable later forfeited its surety bond and agreed to let state agriculture officials liquidate company assets to satisfy debts to growers. Through the process, growers received nearly $1.2 million in payment.

"The Culbertson facility immediately provides Great Plains with storage and handling capabilities that are much needed after yet another record Camelina crop," said Sam Huttenbauer III, Great Plains CEO. "We remain committed to operating a Montana crushing facility, and this agreement allows us to continue to explore our options at Culbertson."

Equipment modifications are needed at the Culbertson plant before it can efficiently extract seed oil while still complying with federal environmental law. The facility is now owned by Carbonics Capital Corp.

February 18, 2009

Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act

MONTANA, Feb 18 2009 (Neo Natura) - Undaunted by many years of failure, backers of the Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act (NREPA) have had it introduced once more into the 111th Congress.

And once more, the massive legislation is being billed as a jobs program, which should get more traction in the face of the current economic meltdown and rapidly rising unemployment.

“NREPA creates 2300 badly needed jobs now by employing people to restore over a million acres of old clearcuts and remove old logging roads, Michael Garrity, Executive Director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies and one of the primary ball-carriers for the bill, said in today’s press release. “NREPA also would formally designate as wilderness all 24 million acres of inventoried roadless areas in the Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, eastern Oregon and eastern Washington.”

"Many of America’s most precious natural resources and wildlife are found in the Northern Rockies,” said Maloney. “NREPA would help protect those resources by drawing wilderness boundaries according to science, not politics. NREPA would also help reduce global warming by protecting the corridors through which vulnerable wildlife can migrate to cooler areas.”
“I am proud to cosponsor this legislation to protect the Northern Rocky Mountains, one of America’s great natural areas,” added Grijalva, who recently lost out to Colorado’s Ken Salazar to be Secretary of the Interior. “A bold plan is needed to preserve and protect what remains of the Lewis and Clark legacy, and this bill would do just that.”

One of the points of criticism of the Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act (NREPA) is confusion over what lands are really covered by the massive proposal. The Alliance for the Wild Rockies, one of the main architects and ball carriers of NREPA, has addressed that point by posting a detailed list of roadless lands affected by the bill.

Specifically, NREPA would:

  • Designate as wilderness 24 million acres of ecosystems and watersheds in the Northern Rockies;
  • Connect natural, biological corridors, ensuring the continued existence of native plants and animals and mitigating the effects of global warming;
  • Restore habitat that has been severely damaged from roads that were built, creating more than 2,300 jobs and leading to a more sustainable economic base in the region;

  • Keep water available for ranchers and farmers downstream until it is most needed; and
  • Eliminate subsidized development in the designated wilderness areas, saving taxpayers $245 million over a 10-year period.
As with past introduction of NREPA no U.S. Senator or Representative from Idaho, Montana or Wyoming has offiically supported the bill.

October 01, 2008

DoE Releases New Powerline Report

MONTANA, Oct 01 2008 (Neo Natura) - Government regulators have chosen a preferred route for a high voltage transmission line from Great Falls to Lethbridge, Alta., in an effort to balance the developer's cost with the disruption caused to farmers.

Montana's Department of Environmental Quality and the U.S. Department of Energy on Monday released a summary of a long-awaited final environmental impact statement for the 327-kilometre Montana Alberta Tie Line. The statement outlines the preferred alternative and several others.

The line would travel about 210 kilometres and cross six counties in Montana. The carrying capacity of 300 megawatts of electricity in each direction has been sold to prospective wind farm developers.

Federal and provincial authorities in Canada have already approved the line and a final decision by the U.S. and Montana departments could come within a month, regulators said.

The plan preferred by the federal and state authorities differs from the tie line group's preferred plan but doesn't go as far as some farmers had hoped, said Greg Hallsten, the environmental impact statement co-ordinator for the Montana authority.

"We basically sat down with the director and went through this segment by segment, trying to pick which would best serve MATL's needs as well as the landowners," Hallsten said. "It's turned out to be a balancing act."

Bob Williams, vice-president of regulatory affairs for the tie line group, said Monday afternoon he couldn't comment because he had not received the summary of the impact statement.

The 215-kilometre preferred alternative has 134 kilometres of single poles and 79 kilometres of wider H-frames.

The addition of single poles and reduction in lines running diagonally across cropland is a nod to farmers, who have complained about having to manoeuvre machinery around the double poles.

"One of the comments we heard loud and clear was to use monopoles on cultivated ground," the Montana department's Tom Ring said.

By comparison, the tie line group's favoured route is 207 kilometres long, slightly shorter than the government's, and has single poles planned on 43 fewer kilometres of land.

The single poles are taller and cost $359,429 per 1.6 kilometres while the H-frames cost $323,092, according to the environmental study.

The tie line needs a presidential permit from the Department of Energy because it crosses an international boundary and a certificate of compliance from the Montana Department of Environmental Quality, said Ellen Russell, project manager for the U.S. Department of Energy's Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability in Washington, D.C.

August 29, 2008

Fed Picks MT For School Wind Program

MONTANA, Aug 29 2008 (Neo Natura) - The United States Department of Energy (DOE) has selected Montana as one of six states to participate in the inaugural year of the Wind for Schools Program.
“This important program will not only provide wind energy for rural Montana schools, but will also educate tomorrow’s leaders on the value and importance of this renewable energy source," said Governor Brian Schweitzer. "In addition, wind energy is American energy, produced by American workers. It decreases our dependence on foreign energy supplies and provides jobs here at home."
The goal of Wind for Schools is to engage rural communities in a discussion of wind energy while encouraging a knowledge and skill base for the industry. The program will serve as a platform for teaching renewable energy principles and opportunities by providing schools with educational curriculum and access to state-of-the-art technology. Other states selected to participate in the program are Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota.

DOE also funded the recent creation of the Wind Applications Center (WAC) at MSU-Bozeman to support Wind for Schools activities and to develop related coursework for engineering students considering a wind industry career. The MSU-WAC is expected to become a regional center for wind energy training, expertise, and outreach.
“I’m proud that our state is one of only six to be chosen for this program," commented Governor Brian Schweitzer. "It just goes to show that Montana is leading the nation in all types of wind energy development from community projects like this to industrial generation facilities.”
To supplement limited federal funding, NorthWestern Energy recently awarded a substantial grant to enable program activities in Cascade, Fairfield, Livingston, and Stanford school districts. The Montana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) has allotted funds from Montana-Dakota Utilities Co.’ Universal Systems Benefits Fund to help support the new Wind Applications Center at MSU-Bozeman.

Public support is now being actively sought to allow additional school districts to participate in the Wind for Schools program. Broadview, Joliet, and Glasgow have already been selected to become Host Schools, and other school districts will be able to join as funding allows. Besides financial contributions, in-kind support including electricians' labor, excavator time, concrete, and materials such as electrical wire and equipment are also needed. All donations are tax-deductible, and will earn recognition in regional media and on a permanent plaque to be placed at each Host School.

With consistent 25-30% annual growth over the last five years, wind energy may provide 20% of the country’s electricity by 2030. The DOE predicts Montana’s wind industry alone could grow from its current 166 MW to 10,000 MW of installed capacity in the next 25 years. Among its benefits, increasing use of wind energy is widely regarded as a way to create jobs and economic growth in rural communities.
Western Community Energy (WCE) of Bozeman has been contracted by the DOE to serve as State Facilitator for Wind for Schools Montana. "Montana is rich with virtually untapped wind and human resources," comments Sean Micken, WCE's Host School Coordinator. "The DOE selected our state to participate in Wind for Schools because it sees the need and opportunity for Montana to become one of the nation's wind energy leaders. Only by directly engaging rural communities and young people can we hope to meet this challenge."

August 28, 2008

DOE Investing $90m in Geothermal Research

MONTANA, Aug 28 2008 (Neo Natura) - The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today issued a Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) for up to $90 million over four years to advance the research, development and demonstration of next-generation geothermal energy technology which will harness the earth's interior heat extracted from hot water or rocks. Currently, DOE has up to $10.5 million available for immediate award under this FOA, with the remainder subject to change and to Congressional appropriations. The FOA addresses the need for additional technical understanding of enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) to accelerate the technology to a state of commercial readiness.

"Geothermal energy is a clean, reliable, scalable, renewable energy source and these geothermal projects will help the U.S. tap domestic heat sources that were previously out of reach," Assistant Secretary of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Andy Karsner said. "Increasing the use of traditional hydrothermal and geothermal base load resources is an important component of the Administration's efforts to diversify our nation's energy sources in an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance our energy security."

EGS are systems of engineered reservoirs created by drilling deep wells into hot rock, fracturing the rock, and circulating a fluid through the wells to extract heat. According to a recent study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) entitled, The Future of Geothermal Energy, EGS represents a large, indigenous resource that, with a reasonable investment in research and development (R&D), could provide the U.S. with 100,000 megawatts of cost-competitive electricity, generating capacity by 2050, or 20 percent of current electricity generation.

While EGS reservoirs have been designed, built, and tested in various locations throughout the world, a number of technical hurdles remain before EGS production facilities will reach commercial production rates and life spans. Through this FOA, DOE will concentrate on issues related to EGS reservoir creation, operation, and management. In the long-term, the work aims to create, sustain, replicate and commercialize EGS technologies, while in the short-term these projects will develop and demonstrate technologies that are useful to both hydrothermal and EGS geothermal projects.

July 14, 2008

Clean Renewable Energy Bonds

MONTANA, Jul 14 2008 (Neo Natura) - Under the recently enacted federal Clean Renewable Energy Bond (CREB) program, electric coopoeratives, public power systems, and municipal utilities can issue or benefit from the issuance of clean renewable tax credit bonds to finance renewable energy projects as a less expensive alternative to traditional tax-exampt bonds. To a large extent, the CREB program is modeled after the Qualified Zone Academy Bond (QZAB) program enacted in 1998 to provide tax incentives for the rehabilitation of public school buildings.

A 135 acre Flathead County landfill located near Kalispell is one of the latest entities to take the goverment up on the offer. The landfill has been collecting methane gas produced by decaying garbage and then burning it, to prevent the greenhouse gas from escaping into the atmosphere.

Flathead Electric co-op's Ross Holter says next year a $3.5 million project will be financed by federal clean renewable energy bonds, and should pay for itself in about 15 years. The project will burn the methane gas that is currently being collected from the landfill, and drive a 1.6 megawatt generator hooked up to the Flathead Electric Co-op's distribution system. The generator will be capable of producing enough power for 900 homes.

June 13, 2008

Windfall Oil Tax

MONTANA, Jun 13 2008 (Neo Natura) - Montana Senator Jon Tester lashed out at Republicans on Tuesday, after the Consumer First Energy Act received only 51 votes, which was nine short of that needed to pass the legislation. The act was designed to roll back tax cuts for oil companies, impose a permanent windfall tax on those companies, and to help protect consumers from high gas prices caused by oil speculation.
"I remember when gas was a buck-46. It wasn't that long ago. It was before the Bush Administration took over. That was before the War in Iraq. Before speculators and market manipulators spiraled out of control. Before that $17 billion Bush tax cut for our nation's biggest oil companies." Tester said in a prepared statement.
Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ken.) said, "Hitting the gas companies might make for good campaign literature or evening news clips, but it won't address the problem. This bill isn't a serious response to gas prices. It is just a gimmick."
The purpose of the gas tax is simple: to raise revenue for building and maintaining roads and related infrastructure. This approach conforms to what economists call the "benefit principle" of taxation, which stipulates that consumers of government services should pay in proportion to the benefit they obtain from those services. It follows that the revenue raised from a tax that adheres to the benefit principle should be used solely to provide the good or service on which the tax is levied. Therefore, if gas taxes are paid by the individuals who benefit most from roads (drivers) and if the revenue is used solely for road building and maintenance, then the tax is a good one.

However, there is also the question of whether gas taxes should be used to decrease fuel consumption in order to protect the environment and reduce pollution. Pigouvian taxes, named after Arthur C. Pigou, a renowned English economist from the early 20th century, are taxes that attempt to make up for undesirable side effects of certain industries—what economists call "negative externalities." Pigouvian taxes are controversial and often difficult to calculate; they complicate the gas tax debate considerably.

Tax Foundation President Scott Hodge's Tax Gouging at the Pump and Record Taxes Paid before Record Oil Profits explain that oil companies actually pay more in taxes than they earn in profits, contrary to some people's notion that "greedy" oil companies are raking in huge profits without paying their fair share of taxes. The Tax Foundation Background Paper Paying at the Pump: Gasoline Taxes in America provides an in-depth look at the history and use of gas taxes. The Fiscal Fact Questions to Ask before Raising the Federal Gas Tax presents a concise discussion of the role of fuel taxes. The Distributional Impact of Windfall Profits Taxes and a Gas Tax Holiday shows how much money taxpayers in each income group stand to gain or lose under the gas tax proposals put forth by the presidential candidates.

The Democratic energy package would have imposed a 25 percent tax on any "unreasonable" profits of the five largest U.S. oil companies, which together made $36 billion during the first three months of the year. It also would have given the government more power to address oil market speculation, opened the way for antitrust actions against countries belonging to the OPEC oil cartel, and made energy price gouging a federal crime.

"Americans are furious about what's going on," declared Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D. He said they want Congress to do something about oil company profits and the "orgy of speculation" on oil markets.

As with all tax initiatives instituted by governments, there is always a divide between those who are for and those who are against the tax. The benefits of a windfall tax include proceeds being directly used by governments to bolster funding for social programs. However, those against windfall taxes claim that they reduce companies' initiatives to seek out profits. They also believe that profits should be reinvested to promote innovation that will in turn benefit society as a whole.

There were arguments in the early 1980's about whether it made economic sense to tax away much of the gain from higher oil prices. But there was no question that the windfall tax was needed to ease the political sting of allowing the domestic price to rise to the level set by OPEC.

Congress hammered out a complicated formula for determining the revenue base liable for taxation and the tax rate. The criteria vary according to the date that oil was discovered, the difficulty of extraction and the size of the company. For some categories of oil, taxes phase out early in the 1990's. In all categories, the taxable base price is adjusted each year for inflation.

The tax raised a whopping $26 billion in 1981, 27 percent of domestic oil revenues. Thereafter, revenues sagged with the price of oil, running just $5.6 billion in 1985 and nothing in 1986. If the price inches above $20 a barrel, Washington may collect a few hundred million dollars this year from the owners of oil discovered before 1978. New discoveries won't be taxed again unless the price soars to $29.

Despite a number of government studies and congressional hearings, no evidence has been presented showing that the oil industry has colluded to keep retail gasoline prices high. For instance, the Energy Information Agency (EIA) in the U.S. Department of Energy found that approximately 85 percent of the changes in gasoline prices in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina were due to changes in the market price of crude oil.

Global energy markets determine the price at which oil is bought and sold by even the largest oil corporations. For instance, ExxonMobil, the world's largest private oil company, accounts for only 3 percent of the market and the prices it pays for crude oil are set by trading on commodities exchanges in London, Hong Kong and Chicago.

What they won't get, however, is nearly as much money out of such a tax as they probably think. A windfall profits tax targeted at earnings far beyond the U.S. industrial average would return zero revenue to the Treasury because windfall profits in the oil sector are figments of the imagination.

While the raw earnings figures sound big, they are unexceptional when we take into account the size of those companies. Divide profits by sales, for instance, and you'll find that in the fourth quarter of 2005 (the last quarter for which data are available), profit margins were 6.8 percent at British Petroleum, 7 percent at ConocoPhilips, 7.1 percent at Shell, 7.7 percent at Chevron, and 10.7 percent at ExxonMobil. The 20 largest investor-owned oil companies earned a collective 8.8 cents on every dollar of sales for that quarter.

While tariffs provide an incentive to increase supply, taxes will decrease demand and therefore prices. With a sufficiently low price expensive domestic production may be crowded out. In the extreme, a halving of demand from 20 to 10 mbd would not eliminate imports, but instead raise their share to 100% with all domestic production becoming uneconomic.

May 19, 2008

Montana Wind Resource Map

MONTANA, May 19 2008 (Neo Natura) - The Department of Energy's Wind Program and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) published a new wind resource map for the state of Montana. This resource map shows wind speed estimates at 50 meters above the ground and depicts the resource that could be used for utility-scale wind development. Future plans are to provide wind speed estimates at 30 meters, which are useful for identifying small wind turbine opportunities.

As a renewable resource, wind is classified according to wind power classes, which are based on typical wind speeds. These classes range from Class 1 (the lowest) to Class 7 (the highest). In general, at 50 meters, wind power Class 4 or higher can be useful for generating wind power with large turbines. Class 4 and above are considered good resources. Particular locations in the Class 3 areas could have higher wind power class values at 80 meters than shown on the 50 meter map because of possible high wind shear. Given the advances in technology, a number of locations in the Class 3 areas may suitable for utility-scale wind development.

This map indicates that Montana has wind resources consistent with utility-scale production. Good-to-excellent wind resource areas are distributed throughout the eastern two-thirds of Montana. The region just east of the Rocky Mountains in northern Montana has excellent-to-superb wind resource, with other outstanding resource areas being located on the hills and ridges between Great Falls and Havre. The region between Billings and Bozeman also has excellent wind resource areas. Ridge crest locations have the highest resource in the western one-third of Montana.

May 08, 2008

DOE Evalution on Water Quality Law

MONTANA, May 08 2008 (Neo Natura) - During 2005, the Montana Board of Environmental Review (BER) announced proposed changes to Montana water quality regulations. The proposal was directed to discharges of water from coal bed natural gas (CBNG) production, and if adopted, could substantially reduce the amount of CBNG production in Montana. Potential impacts could also extend to Wyoming CBNG production through much greater restrictions on water quality that must be met at the interstate border.

DOE’s interest in this proposal stems from the importance of CBNG to U.S. natural gas supply. CBNG currently accounts for 9 percent of U.S. natural gas production and the Powder River Basin, situated in Montana and Wyoming and having a recoverable resource potential in excess of 25 trillion cubic feet, is a prime future source for U.S. natural gas supply. This is especially important in these times of tight natural gas supply and high prices.

DOE conducts technical and regulatory analyses to assist federal and state agencies in developing regulatory requirements that provide environmental benefits commensurate with their economic and energy impacts. These analyses serve to provide a scientific basis for regulatory and land management decision making.

For the proposed Montana CBNG water management rule, DOE tasked Argonne National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratory to evaluate various aspects of the proposal. Argonne focused on regulatory and policy issues and their interrelationships with technology, and Sandia focused on water treatment and engineering, hydrologic and geologic technical issues associated with the zero discharge requirements of the proposal. The findings of these efforts were submitted for the record to the Montana BER.

April 30, 2008

Synthetic Fuel Corporation

MONTANA, Apr 30 2008 (Neo Natura) - Back in 1980, Congress passed the Energy Security Act, which led to the creation of something called the Synthetic Fuels Corp. (SFC). Lawmakers provided SFC with up to $88 billion in loans and incentives to get started (the equivalent of about $230 billion in today's dollars) with the goal of creating two million barrels a day of synthetic oil within seven years.

So why aren't you putting SFC oil into your SUV right now? Well, it turns out that members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries didn't appreciate the competition so they started bringing down the price of oil. From 1980, when SFC launched, to 1986, when it was shut down, oil went from more than $39 a barrel to less than $8 a barrel. Suddenly, synthetic oil didn't seem so important anymore.

In announcing the SFC's closure, then-Energy Secretary John Herrington said that oil prices had simply dropped too low to make it a viable business.

But the good news is that those economics don't work anymore. The state of Montana, which is leading the synthetic fuel charge, says we can now make it for
somewhere around $55 a barrel. That's more than a 50 percent discount from what it costs to buy the real stuff.

Oil isn't the only resource going up in price, though. The highest price affecting CTL synthetic fuel creation is the price of coal.

There is an abundance of coal in the United States, but like many other commodities its price is increasingly dependent on events elsewhere in the world. Snowstorms this winter cut coal production in China and heavy rain flooded mines in Australia — the world's largest coal exporter. Meanwhile, demand for coal to generate electricity and make steel is rising almost everywhere, especially in fast-growing China and India.

Congress doesn't seem to keen about helping to boost synthetic fuel from coal. The new farm bill concentrates it's investment of renewable energy exclusively towards providing grants and loans to help advance the development of cellulosic biofuels.

April 17, 2008

NW Energy Unsure On Future Energy Costs

MONTANA, Apr 17 2008 (Neo Natura) - NorthWestern Energy Corp. told regulators Wednesday that rising fuel costs and the potential for carbon taxes are making it difficult to map the utility's energy future.

The Public Service Commission is reviewing the company's plan for buying electricity in the coming years. NorthWestern wants to get back into the energy production business that was lost during deregulation and the transformation from the old Montana Power Co.

But NorthWestern says it is hard to predict what will happen with carbon rules in Congress. Such rules, and the potential for a special tax, could impact decisions in trying to find the cheapest power sources for Montana consumers.

The company says the tax, and rising fuel costs, mean that Montanans will likely be paying more for electricity in coming years regardless of what is done.

"You are attempting to make a forecast predicting, when you have no idea what is going to happen," said commissioner Doug Mood. "We ought to be warning people in this state that we have no idea what is going to happen to the price of electricity."
Currently, NorthWestern does not have its own electricity production. The cost that NorthWestern pays for electricity, from such companies as PPL Montana, a unit of PPL Corp., is largely passed onto consumers.

John Hines, NorthWestern's chief supply officer, said the company is phasing in more long-term contracts out past five years as a way to steady market turmoil.

Hines said the company is carefully taking "baby steps" toward building its own energy production to further steady energy prices. It could take 20 years or more to become "fully integrated."

Such a move was allowed by legislation last year that undid some of the state's so-called deregulation laws of the 1990s. Deregulation banned the utility from also owning the power production.

Hines said there is an "incredible amount of risk" until then because the company will be subject to the cost of power on the open market.

Commissioner Ken Toole told the company that he believes there are strategies, such as conservation, that could mitigate the risk of fuel prices.

Other commissioners also talked about the need to develop resources that don't use fossil fuels, such as geothermal and compressed air storage.

Commissioner Chairman Greg Jergeson said he is critical of Northwestern for not analyzing the possibility of allowing the utility arm of the company to buy the corporate parent's interest in a Colstrip coal-fired power plant - which NorthWestern is considering selling.

Jergeson said that plant could provide valuable energy and help the utility.

"I think there are ways they could make that a valuable rate-based asset in their portfolio," he said.
The PSC will offer written comments in the plan in a couple of months, which will help the company make decisions down the road, Jergeson said.

April 10, 2008

USGS Releases Bakken Report

MONTANA, Apr 10 (Neo Natura) - North Dakota and Montana have an estimated 3.0 to 4.3 billion barrels of undiscovered, technically recoverable oil in an area known as the Bakken Formation.

A U.S. Geological Survey assessment, released April 10, shows a 25-fold increase in the amount of oil that can be recovered compared to the agency's 1995 estimate of 151 million barrels of oil.

Technically recoverable oil resources are those producible using currently available technology and industry practices. USGS is the only provider of publicly available estimates of undiscovered technically recoverable oil and gas resources.

New geologic models applied to the Bakken Formation, advances in drilling and production technologies, and recent oil discoveries have resulted in these substantially larger technically recoverable oil volumes. About 105 million barrels of oil were produced from the Bakken Formation by the end of 2007.

The USGS Bakken study was undertaken as part of a nationwide project assessing domestic petroleum basins using standardized methodology and protocol as required by the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 2000.

The Bakken Formation estimate is larger than all other current USGS oil assessments of the lower 48 states and is the largest "continuous" oil accumulation ever assessed by the USGS. A "continuous" oil accumulation means that the oil resource is dispersed throughout a geologic formation rather than existing as discrete, localized occurrences. The next largest "continuous" oil accumulation in the U.S. is in the Austin Chalk of Texas and Louisiana, with an undiscovered estimate of 1.0 billions of barrels of technically recoverable oil.

"It is clear that the Bakken formation contains a significant amount of oil - the question is how much of that oil is recoverable using today's technology?" said Senator Byron Dorgan, of North Dakota. "To get an answer to this important question, I requested that the U.S. Geological Survey complete this study, which will provide an up-to-date estimate on the amount of technically recoverable oil resources in the Bakken Shale formation."

The USGS estimate of 3.0 to 4.3 billion barrels of technically recoverable oil has a mean value of 3.65 billion barrels. Scientists conducted detailed studies in stratigraphy and structural geology and the modeling of petroleum geochemistry. They also combined their findings with historical exploration and production analyses to determine the undiscovered, technically recoverable oil estimates.

USGS worked with the North Dakota Geological Survey, a number of petroleum industry companies and independents, universities and other experts to develop a geological understanding of the Bakken Formation. These groups provided critical information and feedback on geological and engineering concepts important to building the geologic and production models used in the assessment.

Five continuous assessment units (AU) were identified and assessed in the Bakken Formation of North Dakota and Montana - the Elm Coulee-Billings Nose AU, the Central Basin-Poplar Dome AU, the Nesson-Little Knife Structural AU, the Eastern Expulsion Threshold AU, and the Northwest Expulsion Threshold AU.

At the time of the assessment, a limited number of wells have produced oil from three of the assessments units in Central Basin-Poplar Dome, Eastern Expulsion Threshold, and Northwest Expulsion Threshold.
The Elm Coulee oil field in Montana, discovered in 2000, has produced about 65 million barrels of the 105 million barrels of oil recovered from the Bakken Formation.

April 07, 2008

Air Force Considers Montana CTL Plant

MONTANA, Apr 07 (Neo Natura) - Although the Air Force program is currently purchasing gas-to-liquids synfuel purchased overseas, they are pushing for a CTL facility to be built in Montana. While coal is plentiful in the American West, natural gas is far too precious in the North American market to be used as the input for F-T conversion. McClatchy's Air Force leads push to liquefied coal fuel (March 30, 2008) tells the story—
With every $10 rise in the price of a barrel of oil costing the Air Force $600 million, the service is converting its entire 6,000-plane fleet to run on a synthetic fuel mixture. Tentative plans call for construction of a coal-to-liquid fuel plant at a Montana air base.

Air Force officials have been testing synthetic fuels based on coal or natural gas. They plan to certify the fleet of nearly 6,000 aircraft to fly on a 50-50 blend of synthetic fuel and traditional petroleum-based jet fuel by 2011.

Assistant Air Force Secretary Bill Anderson said the search for affordable, cleaner-burning alternative fuels was driven by economic and national-security concerns.
Let's state the obvious up front—the Air Force is surely "peak oil aware." Branches of the military and the intelligence services do scenarios planning. "The United States would be all but powerless to protect the American economy in the face of a catastrophic disruption of oil markets, high-level participants in [Oil Shockwave] concluded yesterday."

Even without a large oil shock like those of the 1970s, relentless price increases and the possibility of declining global liquids output leading to supply shortfalls in the U.S within the next decade has led the Air Force to the coal-to-liquids solution. If the Air Force thought we were going to be swimming in oil by 2016, their target implementation date, they would not be proposing using F-T to meet their jet fuel needs.

Many obstacles stand in the way of the Air Force's plan. The climate change lobby is not going to roll over on the issue, which creates a bad precedent and provides momentum for carbon-intensive F-T operations in the United States. "I think across the board there is going to be opposition from the environmental movement," said John Topping, the president of the Climate Institute in Washington. "I'd say it's going to be almost universal because of the climate concerns" (McClatchy). The Congress will probably have a Democrat majority after the fall elections. This likely means tough sledding for the Air Force.

As awareness of the climate problem grows in the United States, the economic squeeze brought on by higher oil prices creates pressure to implement supply-side solutions to alleviate soaring diesel fuel costs.

March 28, 2008

The Hardrock Mining and Reclamation Act of 2007

MONTANA, Mar 28 (Neo Natura) - Although now 135 years old, the 1872 Mining Law still governs mining on public lands for precious minerals such as gold and copper. Signed into law by President Ulysses S. Grant, the 1872 Mining Law allows mining companies to stake claims on public land and take whatever minerals they find without royalties to the U.S. citizens that own these resources.
EarthWorks has written the following to congress, "The 1872 Mining Law places the interests of mining corporations above those of U.S. citizens. In 2001, for example, the U.S. Forest Service approved a silver and copper mine that would tunnel directly into the heart of the Cabinet Mountains Wilderness Area in northwestern Montana – one of the ten original Wilderness Areas established by Congress in 1964. The mine would pollute the famed Clark Fork River, deplete an important native bulltrout fishery and jeopardize one of the last remaining grizzly bear populations in the lower 48 states. Even though there is broad opposition to this mine, the Forest Service argued that the 1872 Mining Law left them no choice but to approve it."
The Hardrock Mining and Reclamation Act of 2007 (HR2262) consists of the following major points.
• Protect water resources and habitats by establishing strong environmental and cleanup standards specific to mining;
• Provide a fair return to taxpayers, by providing for a reasonable 8% royalty on the value of the precious minerals mining companies take from public lands;
• Defend local communities and special places from irresponsible mining, by giving land managers the ability to balance mining with other uses of the public’s lands;
• Abolish the giveaway of public lands to private mining interests; and
• Create an Abandoned Mine Land Fund and a Community Impact Assistance Fund to address the long-standing hazards of abandoned mines to drinking water, fish and wildlife habitat, and the well being of local communities.

March 13, 2008

Zero Emission Coal Plant Nixed

MONTANA, Mar 13 (Neo Natura) - When the Department of Energy announced in January that it would cancel funding for the vaunted FutureGen project (to build the world’s first coal-fired power plant with zero carbon dioxide emissions), the decision was widely viewed as the biggest setback to date for carbon capture and storage (C.C.S.) technologies.

First announced by the D.O.E. in 2003, FutureGen was seen as a prototype for a new fleet of coal plants that would strip the carbon from coal and coal plant smokestacks, and bury it deep underground where it would remain for thousands of years. Working with a coalition of domestic and foreign energy companies, the federal government was to pay 74 percent of the cost – which by the time the concept was scrapped had soared to a projected $1.8 billion, up from $1 billion.

FutureGen also bore the hope of industry and government officials that “clean coal” – long an oxymoron to those who actually mine and burn the stuff – could become a reality. In February 2007, Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman called FutureGen “one of our most exciting projects,” noting that it would build “the world’s first commercial scale, coal-fired power plant that produces no significant emissions of carbon or pollutants into the atmosphere.” In December, less than two months before the D.O.E. backed away, the new FutureGen plant site at Mattoon, Illinois was announced with great fanfare.

Now those plans are in ruins – along with the projections of the most optimistic proponents, who had hoped to build on a grand scale, so that we could significantly reduce carbon dioxide emissions in this country while continuing to rely on coal for most of our electricity.

FutureGen CEO Michael Mudd, for one, hasn’t given up, saying he hopes “to continue to work with the D.O.E.” to salvage the ambitious project, or else to seek new funding from Congress, where members from coal-producing states have been big FutureGen supporters. “FutureGen is too important for the future of coal, and for the advancement of [carbon capture and storage] technology, not only for Illinois and the U.S. but actually for the world, to just to walk away from,” Mudd said two weeks after the D.O.E. decision was made public.

But while it has all the characteristics of a massive government boondoggle – a bloated original concept, ballooning budgets, competing interests focused as much on their own piece of the pie as on the overall goal, and an abrupt and embarrassing pulling of the plug – the FutureGen debacle did not occur within a vacuum. Nor is it the only setback for a viable nationwide C.C.S. system.

Problems with FutureGen had been noted for months, most prominently in a March 2007 report by a research group from Massachusetts Institute of Technology headed by Ernest Moniz, a physics and engineering systems professor. That report characterized the project as overregulated, underfunded, and poorly managed. “The Future of Coal: Options for a Carbon Constrained World” was characterized by the mainstream press as casting a cold eye on the concept of clean coal, particularly on the gasification technology known as integrated gasification combined cycle (I.G.C.C., which involves converting coal into a gaseous state rather than pulverizing it, before it is burned in boilers). That’s not the case: Moniz has stated that I.G.C.C. “looks like the most economic option for using coal and capturing the carbon dioxide for sequestration,” and the report makes it clear that the government should put more, not less, money and muscle into C.C.S. projects.

But the report also states that a single, federally funded “super-project” will be insufficient to prove the technology and attract the investment necessary to make C.C.S. into a reality.

Meanwhile a number of other proposed designs for C.C.S. projects have suffered FutureGen’s fate.

- Minneapolis-based Xcel Energy, an electric utility that serves eight states across the Midwest and the Rockies, said in November it will postpone for at least two years its plans to build an I.G.C.C. plant with carbon capture capability in Colorado.
- Rebuffing a coalition of mayors headed by Laura Miller of Dallas, Mike Green, CEO of Texas energy giant TXU Power, said that I.G.C.C. will not work with Texas lignite or Western coal. Green told The Dallas Morning News that I.G.C.C. and C.C.S. are “not ready for prime time.”
- In 2006, Governor Brian Schweitzer of Montana announced a grandiose scheme for coal plants featuring C.C.S. technology, saying that Montana and three other Rocky Mountain neighbors could produce enough liquid fuel from coal and oil shale to supply America’s oil and gas needs for the next 800 years. But he has been forced to concede that his original vision was overblown, and that none of his envisioned projects have gotten past the press-release stage.

Despite years of glowing pronouncements from politicians and D.O.E. officials, and hundreds of millions in research and development funds from the states and the federal government, not a spade has been turned to build clean coal plants in Montana – or anywhere else in America, for that matter. Does that mean that carbon capture and storage, and its associated technologies like I.G.C.C., are beyond repair? Hardly. But it does mean that we are moving beyond the period of artists’ renderings and enthusiastic press conferences to a phase of hard realities, as the promise and the challenge of capturing and storing large amounts of carbon dioxide are examined in a harsher light. A look at a pair existing C.C.S. projects – one on the Northern Plains and one on the Gulf Coast of Texas and Mississippi – demonstrates that capturing carbon from coal-based power generation is difficult, storing it for hundreds of years is quite feasible, and building the infrastructure to do so on a national scale is going to be very, very expensive.

It is not entirely accurate to say that FutureGen would have been the world’s first coal-based plant with a carbon-capture system attached. That distinction belongs to the Dakota Gasification Plant about 50 miles northwest of Bismarck, North Dakota. However, Dakota Gas doesn’t produce electricity; it just converts coal into natural gas, in the process capturing carbon dioxide from the coal and sending it via a 325-kilometer pipeline to EnCana’s Weyburn oilfield in Canada. There the carbon dioxide is pumped deep underground to aid with enhanced oil recovery (E.O.R.), prolonging the life of the Weyburn wells.

Dakota Gas is actually a remnant of America’s first energy crisis, the 1970s oil shock that lead to a brief flowering of alternative-energy research, and its tangled history gives an idea of how difficult it might be to finance and build a full-fledged coal-fired electricity industry using carbon capture. Planned and funded under President Jimmy Carter, the gasification plant was completed at a cost of $2.1 billion in 1984 and filed for bankruptcy on the first day natural gas from coal began flowing from the plant. Operated by the government for four years, it was sold in 1988 to the Great Basin Electrical Co-op, which also owns two 450-megawatt coal stations adjacent to the gasification plant.

Now run under a revenue-sharing agreement with the D.O.E., the plant sends an annual 3 million tons of carbon dioxide north to the Weyburn field, which has produced nearly 400 million barrels since its 1954 discovery. There, at a rate of around 125 million cubic feet per day, the carbon dioxide is pumped down into the reservoir, where it mixes with the oil and makes it easier to pump to the surface. Carbon dioxide that is removed with the oil is extracted and recycled back into the wells.

By almost any measure, the Dakota Gas/Weyburn project has been a success. It has proven the technological and geological feasibility of stripping carbon dioxide from coal prior to burning and using it for E.O.R. – an increasingly important technique as domestic oilfields face depletion. The economics, though, are a different matter.

“If this thing cost $2 billion in the 1970s, what do you think it would cost today?” asks Gary Loop, the C.O.O. of Dakota Gas. He questions whether such greenfield plants can be built and run to make them commercially profitable. In fact, a Phase 2 plan to build a generating station at the Beulah facility using gas from the Dakota Gas plant has been on the books for years, but Loop says, “We don’t believe Phase 2 is economical.”

“Of course, we’ve got 1970s technology,” he adds. The company is currently looking for a partner – and federal funding, naturally – to build such a generating station nearby, plus an expanded pipeline system that would collect carbon dioxide from other plants in the region and ship it north to Weyburn. “If you took all the carbon being produced in electrical plants in this area – most of which have carbon dioxide that would be more difficult to capture than ours – there’s enough known E.O.R. sites within 300 miles, which is the economic distance, to handle all the output for the next 50 years.”

There are several “ifs” embedded in that statement: if you could find a way to economically retrofit the existing plants; if the utilities could find financing to build the new capture systems; if consumers could be convinced to absorb the added price per kilowatt-hour of their electricity; and if you could successfully store the CO2 underground once you ran out of oil wells needing E.O.R.

That last question is the piece of the puzzle being examined by a team of geologists and oilfield engineers, at the Bureau of Economic Geology at the University of Texas. With funding from the D.O.E.’s Regional Carbon Sequestration Program, which is backing seven such partnerships around the country, the researchers have spent the last 4 years injecting 1,850 tons of carbon dioxide into the Frio formation, about 30 miles east of Houston. Soon they’ll begin scaling up the system for a much more ambitious project near Natchez, Mississippi.

Scheduled for 10 years, with $38 million in D.O.E. funding, this second phase will be the first long-term project in the U.S. to study the feasibility of injecting large volumes of CO2 into underground storage locations. Unlike the Frio project, which stored relatively small amounts, the Mississippi experiment will handle commercial volumes, from a plant owned by Denbury Resources, Inc. of Plano, Texas. According to lead scientist Susan Hovorka, that will come to around 1 million tons of carbon dioxide a year. “We need to go to the next level,” says Hovorka. “We’ll be injecting at a rate of 1 million tons a year in four wells.”

Noting that a typical 450 MW power plant produces 5 million to 8 million tons of CO2 annually, Hovorka says, “The math is easy – you’ll need a well field. If we can get 1 million tons [a year] easily in four wells, and you want to do five times that, that gives you 20 wells.”

So far the data from the Frio tests has been encouraging. The carbon dioxide injections have been stable, and no leaks have been detected – to the extent that even drilling a well and trying to “produce” carbon dioxide (i.e., pump it to the surface) proved difficult. The storage part of capture-and-storage is “in the bag,” says Hovorka. “If you want it, it’s there,” she adds. “The question of whether you want to pay for capturing it also remains open.”

February 04, 2008

Environmentalists vs. Coal

MONTANA, Feb 04 (Neo Natura) - In federal and state courtrooms across the country, environmental groups are putting coal-fueled power plants on trial in a bid to slow the industry's biggest construction boom in decades. Environmental opposition has sped up since the U.S. Supreme Court decision in April that said carbon dioxide is a pollutant open to regulation.

The case, Massachusetts vs. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, involved vehicle emissions. Some believe environmentalists aim to use the decision as a fulcrum to leverage regulators to take a harder line on greenhouse gases in several emerging power-plant disputes.

At least four dozen coal plants are being contested in 29 states, according to a recent Associated Press tally. The targeted utilities include giants like Peabody Energy down to small rural cooperatives.

From lawsuits and administrative appeals against the companies, to lobbying pressure on federal and state regulators, the coordinated offensive against coal is emerging as a pivotal front in the debate over global warming.

"Our goal is to oppose these projects at each and every stage, from zoning and air and water permits, to their mining permits and new coal railroads," said Bruce Nilles, a Sierra Club attorney who directs the group's national coal campaign. "They know they don't have an answer to global warming, so they're fighting for their life."

Among the projects being challenged is a 680-megawatt coal-gasification plant proposed by Energy Northwest, a public-power consortium based in Richland.

Industry representatives say the environmentalists' actions threaten to undermine the country's fragile power grid, setting the stage for a future of high-priced electricity and uncontrollable blackouts.

"These projects won't be denied, but they can be delayed by those who oppose any new energy projects," said Vic Svec, vice president of the mining and power company Peabody Energy.

While observers say forecasts of power-grid doom are exaggerated, the importance of coal -- one of the country's cheapest and most abundant fuels -- is undeniable.

Coal plants provide just over half of the nation's electricity. They also are the largest domestic source of the greenhouse-gas carbon dioxide, emitting 2 billion tons annually, about a third of the country's total.

Environmental groups cite 59 canceled, delayed or blocked plants as evidence they are turning back the "coal rush." That stacks up against 22 new plants now under construction in 14 states -- the most in more than two decades.

Mining companies, utilities and coal-state politicians promote coal in the name of national security, as an alternative to foreign fuels. With hundreds of years of reserves still in the ground, they're also pushing coal-to-diesel plants as a way to sharply increase domestic production.

The outcome of the fight over coal could determine the nation's greenhouse-gas emissions for years to come, said Gregory Nemet, assistant professor of public affairs at the University of Wisconsin.

"It's pretty much irreversible," Nemet said. "Once a coal plant is built, it will last 50 years or so. There's too much pressure -- in terms of energy independence and the inexpensiveness of that resource -- to not use that coal," Nemet said.

One of the latest challenges to a utility came in the heart of coal country -- Montana, which boasts the largest coal reserves in the nation.

On Friday, a state panel refused to rescind an air-quality permit it had granted for a plant proposed for the Great Falls area by Southern Montana Electric, despite concerns about the plant's carbon-dioxide emissions. The 250-megawatt plant is projected to emit the equivalent of 2.8 million tons of carbon dioxide annually, as much as 500,000 vehicles.

The Montana Environmental Information Center, which had asked the panel to review the permit, vowed to appeal the ruling.

Nilles said the Sierra Club spent about $1 million on such efforts in 2007 and hopes to ratchet that figure up to $10 million this year.

Meanwhile, coal interests are pouring even more into a promotional campaign launched by the industry group Americans for Balanced Energy Choices. It spent $15 million last year and expects to more than double that to $35 million in 2008, said the group's director, Joe Lucas.

Funding for the group comes from coal-mining and utility companies such as Peabody and railroads that depend on coal shipments for a large share of their revenues.

Peabody's Svec acknowledged a rush to build new plants but denied the goal was to beat any of at least seven bills pending before Congress to restrict carbon-dioxide emissions -- a charge leveled by some environmentalists.

Rather, he said, the construction boom is driven by projections that the country will fall into a power deficit within the next decade if new plants are not built.

Industry attorney Jeffrey Holmstead said that could lead to rolling blackouts as the economy expands and electricity consumption increases. Holmstead was in charge of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's air program during the first five years of the current Bush administration.

The power deficit cited by industry officials is based on projections from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation. NERC Vice President David Nevius said his group is "neutral" on what kind of plants should be built to meet rising demand.

"We're not saying the lights will go out. We're just saying additional resources are needed," Nevius said. "We don't say coal over gas over wind over solar."

Utilities now burn more than 1 billion tons of coal annually in more than 600 plants. Over the next two decades, the Bush administration projects coal's share of electricity generation will increase to almost 60 percent.

That projection held steady in recent months even as courts and regulators turned back, delayed or asked for changes to plants in at least nine states.

Some were canceled over global-warming concerns. Utilities backed off others after their price tags climbed over $1 billion because of rising costs for materials and skilled labor.

January 31, 2008

Proposed Federal EIS Plan

MONTANA, Jan 31 (Neo Natura) - A public discussion on the proposed federal EIS project, a plan to designate energy corridors on federal land in 11 Western states, drew few comments at a public meeting in Helena, but for the most part was supported from representatives of organizations who attended.

Use this form to submit comments on the Energy Corridor Draft Programmatic EIS. All comments received or postmarked by Thursday, February 14, 2008 will be considered. You can also view the proposed corridor area.

Most favored a route for oil and natural gas pipelines, power lines and distribution facilities that follows U.S. 287 from Townsend to Three Forks, then westward toward Butte and Anaconda and splitting to run north and south along the inter-states.

Another favored route could run from Townsend across Interstate 15 and the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest, then north to Garrison and continue into Idaho.
“I’m bringing 200 petition letters asking for either the Garrison/Milltown or Townsend/Three Forks/Milk Creek routes,” Linda Sather, Anaconda-Deer Lodge County commissioner said at Tuesday’s meeting. “We want this in our county. We welcome it and support it wholeheartedly.”
But others are wary of the corridors, saying they could run through roadless areas. In New Mexico, critics said the map of the proposed corridors show only disconnected lines and that connecting the corridors would involve pipelines and power lines crossing state, tribal or private land. They said the connecting routes should be determined before the true impacts of the corridors can be measured.

Throughout the West, the proposed corridors cross through 12 national parks, monuments or recreation areas and three wildlife refuges. That’s down from the initial plan that involved 29 national parks, monuments or recreation areas; 15 wild-life refuges; and 58 wilderness areas.

“Although the Energy Department has made significant improvements in their proposed corridor designations, the proposed corridors still lack thorough consideration of the likely damage to federal lands and other places,” said Nada Culver, who has tracked the process for the Wilderness Society since it began. “In Montana and elsewhere, the Energy Department needs to come up with alternatives to minimize the number of corridors and maximize use of renewable energy, and it should include firm requirements to limit all projects to designated corridors.”

The energy corridors are part of an energy bill passed in 2005 to provide more energy to Western states and shorten the length of time it takes the energy industry to gain approval to run pipelines and power lines.

Once projects are proposed for the corridors, they would undergo additional environmental review before permits were issued and rights-of-way granted.

Jeff Barber with the Montana Environmental Information Center said the center supports the idea of energy corridors, but would like them placed within existing transmission routes and, if possible, to limit the export of Montana power.

“If it’s a coal plant exporting power, that’s not a direction we want to go,” Barber said. “But if it’s wind generation we want to export, that’s a different situation.”

Overall, the corridors include 6,055 miles over almost 3 million acres in Montana, California, Nevada, Colorado, Utah, Washington, Oregon, Wyoming, Idaho, New Mexico and Arizona.

Brian Mills, Department of Energy environmental protection specialist, said the corridors would be about 3,500 feet wide — although that could vary — with 3,700 miles in existing corridors’ right of way.
In Montana, the proposed corridors cover 102 miles over 42,000 acres of federal land.