There are thousands, if not millions of miles of natural gas pipelines running throughout the country and many, many neighborhoods. Are you suggesting they all be dug up and removed because they may leak? These arguments are getting ridiculous as it not about the pines but one thing only, as defined in one of the articles.
There's a big difference between the gas line running under your street and what they're proposing to run to the BL England plant.
And yes, actually we should look to replace aging infrastructure. Or do we just all sit back and do nothing while natural gas leaks into the air around us? How about all of the fire hydrants in Newark that don't work because of 100+ year old leaking water pipes. Should we do nothing about that, too?
MY problem with the pipeline to the BL England plant is this:
1. That plant is not necessary for the grid in New Jersey. It doesn't produce that much power.
2. The pipeline goes against Pinelands Commission regulations. Infrastructure such as pipelines CAN go through the Pinelands if it serves communities there. The BL England plant does not serve any Pinelands communities.
3. Governor Christie stacked the Pinelands Commission to get the approval for the pipeline. South Jersey Gas has a lot of ties back to Christie's croneys.
I've noticed that it's generally the more politically conservative people who support the pipeline. What I don't understand is that (from my experience) conservatives are all about the rule of law. (Fighting for the 2nd amendment, fighting Obamacare, etc.) But why aren't people up in arms about #3 here? Why is it alright for this guy to circumvent laws and regulations in such a way that will have a HUGE impact on an area of the state that is so important to people here? (I mean, why are you on this website if you don't care about the pines?)
This is not meant to be a liberal vs. conservative thing, but more of a "ok we have a system of laws here, and we have someone to did an end run around the commission to get this pipeline approved." Let's focus on that for a minute. How is that alright?
Look, I believe that we shouldn't be as reliant on fossil fuels as we are, and I do appreciate that there are alternatives out there, however the alternate technology that we have today isn't enough to get us off fossil fuels. Someday soon, maybe. And I'd much rather have the stupid BL England plant burning natural gas than coal. But you know what, run the pipeline around the Pines to get it to the plant. Why should Pinelands communities have to suffer because it's inconvenient for SJ Gas to find an alternate route?
Now, let's talk about the Southern Reliability Link. I'm less opposed to that since the commission isn't involved. Am I happy that they're going to be cutting a ROW through the relatively untouched woods through Ft. Dix? No. But let's examine one of the reasons why they want to build this thing:
https://www.njng.com/about/southern-reliability-link/
Superstorm Sandy was the most devastating storm to ever hit our state. The damage to New Jersey’s shore communities, especially in Monmouth and Ocean counties, was unlike anything experienced in our history. If the lessons from Superstorm Sandy have taught us anything, it is the critical need for system reliability and resiliency.
There's the house I was renting in Toms River on the day after Hurricane Sandy. I had four feet of water inside.
I borrowed a pair of chest waders and walked the half mile from higher ground to my house and went inside. Wanna know what still worked? The natural gas and the water. (And friends who didn't have water inside their house and a generator also found that their FiOS still worked as well.)
When the waters finally receded utility workers went around to every house and shut off the gas supply and other utilities for safety reasons and spray painted the houses to show they had been cut off:
G for gas, E for electric, S for sewer.
So tell me, do we really need another gas pipeline when what we had worked just fine?