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The Washington Department of Ecology denied permits Jan. 19 for the massive fracked gas-to-methanol Kalama Methanol Refinery. The department nixed the fossil fuel processing and export proposal after deciding it would have a significant negative impact on the climate, Washington’s shorelines and the public interest.

The state’s disapproval of the Shoreline Management Act permits means that Northwest Innovation Works and the port of Kalama may not construct the methanol refinery, the export dock or any related infrastructure.

“Without the necessary state and federal permits, this climate-wrecking proposal is going nowhere,” said Brett VandenHeuvel, executive director with Columbia Riverkeeper. “Ecology’s decision is cause for celebration for people across the Northwest who value bold leadership to tackle the climate crisis. We applaud Gov. Inslee and Director Watson’s decision to follow the science and the law.”

“Over six years, in thousands of written comments and hours of public testimony, people in Kalama and across the Northwest urged Gov. Inslee and Ecology to protect our climate and our community from this destructive, polluting refinery,” said Sally Keely, a math professor and a resident of Kalama. “I’m thrilled they respected our voices.”

“Gov. Inslee and Ecology did the right thing. In the middle of a climate emergency, building the world’s largest fracked gas-to-methanol refinery makes no sense,” said Stephanie Hillman, northwest campaign representative for Sierra Club and co-director of the Power Past Fracked Gas Coalition.

“People across the state have consistently said they do not support a clean energy future that simply invests in dirty fossil fuel infrastructure,” said Alyssa Macy, CEO of Washington Environmental Council and Washington Conservation Voters. “Today’s science-based decision helps ensure Washington’s promise of a livable planet for generations to come.”

“This decision helps ensure we’ll never see a massive fracked-gas refinery that would pose a catastrophic risk to the fragile Columbia River ecosystem that people and imperiled species depend on to survive,” said Jared Margolis, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “We can’t keep pretending these dirty fossil fuel projects don’t jeopardize our continued existence by accelerating the climate crisis and destroying essential habitat. Thankfully Washington has stepped up and rejected this monstrosity.”

“Today’s decision keeps fossil fuels in the ground where they belong,” said Kristen Boyles, an Earthjustice staff attorney. “Gov. Inslee and Ecology put people over polluters by stating once and for all that a clean energy future cannot be built on the back of dirty energy infrastructure.”

Background

Northwest Innovation Works sought to build methanol refineries at Kalama, Wash., and Port Westward, Ore., to take advantage of the region’s cheap fracked gas (methane), electricity and water. The refineries would convert stunning volumes of fracked gas into methanol for export to China, to make plastics or fuel China’s growing fleet of automobiles.

Each methanol refinery could consume 270 million cubic feet of fracked gas per day, more than all other industries in Washington combined. Methane, collected by fracking, is a potent greenhouse gas. New studies show that fracking for methane gas is a major threat to our climate because methane escapes into the atmosphere from gas wells and pipelines.

Originally published by the Center for Biological Diversity.