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Opinion: National Grid Has No Place in NYC’s Climate-Resilient Future

2 Comments

  • Lee G
    Posted October 21, 2020 at 10:13 am

    There is nothing safe about fossil fuels. I am disappointed in City Limits for punctuating a strong statement on National Grid’s dangerous, unhealthy and expensive designs on our community with an outrageously misleading ad/propaganda statement from NG itself. Pipelines are climate and economic crimes; there should not be debated, but instead rapidly dismantled and defeated.

  • Ken Schles
    Posted October 22, 2020 at 8:28 am

    Let’s begin to deconstruct the falsehoods of National Grid’s fallacious response. I’ll just take on just two points to start. The whole of National Grid’s unsubstantiated statement is ripe for refutation. I invite others to add.

    1. “Safe, reliable and economical.” There is nothing safe about fracked gas. Upstream or down, fracked gas is polluting/destructive to life on this planet. Responsible for cancer clusters and destroyed aquifers at the source, polluting drinking water, leaking methane, problems with fracked gas exist all along the transportation route from wellhead to the end consumer, dumping invisible climate changing gas into the atmosphere. Gas flaring, a regular practice, dumps climate changing gas into the atmosphere by the ton. Explosions have killed dozens. Part of National Grid’s ‘reliability’ plan involves transporting liquified fracked gas by truck. A practice banned in NYC after 40 people were killed in an explosion in 1973. And National Grid cannot be held to account for it’s safety record either. Last year, in one project in Queens it was cited with 1,616 safety violation. If National Grid were held to account for the aftermarket costs of their pollution they’d quickly be insolvent. Instead they pass the costs of their destructive activities downmarket to consumers, something we pay for through increased asthma rates, cardiovascular and pulmonary disease, increased storm surges, floods, hurricanes, deadly heat waves, fire and drought. Changes to ecosystems is causing a great die off of wildlife on this planet, something unseen since the death of the dinosaurs. Coastal flooding threatens coastal cities and rising sea levels will eventually wipe out the cultural legacy of the past 10,000 years. No price can be put to those kinds of costs.
    2. “routine maintenance” The construction of the North Brooklyn Pipeline is not a maintenance project. It is an expansion of the system, in effect making a large horizontal underground storage facility snaking through the poor, mostly BIPOC neighborhoods along its route, threatening 163,000 people, 81 daycare facilities, 63 schools, 9 healthcare centers, 3 nursing homes and a medical center along its route. The pipeline is leading to what National Grid hopes will be an expanded LNG and CNG depot in Greenpoint, to offload and transport gas for sale in other markets. There is no local need of gas consumers for this expansion pipeline.

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