Above: Natural coastal area of the proposed Rio Grande LNG terminal. Credit: Dylan Baddour/Inside Climate News
Below: Artist Rendering of the Rio Grande LNG project (Photo: Business Wire, 11/21/2019)
On September 18, 2024 our allies released a report on Citi Bank: Citi: Funding Fossil-Fueled Environmental Racism in the Gulf South, which includes a case study of the Rio Bravo pipeline and the Rio Grande terminal.
Is the Oregon State Treasury (OST) also supporting environmental racism in the Gulf South? Yes.
Was it a controversial project at the time the OST invested? Yes.
Was the OST an important investor? Yes.
In fact, Oregon’s investment in the LNG terminal is considered so key that spokespeople for those affected by the project traveled from Texas to ask the Oregon Investment Council (OIC) to use their influence to cancel the project.
Here is the story of Oregon’s decision to invest in this financially troubled and environmentally devastating project – and what the OST can do now.
In December of 2022, OSTinvested $350 million in Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP) Fund V to build The Rio Grande LNG Export Terminal in Texas.
The Oregon Treasury decided to invest in spite of widespread project opposition
The Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe of Texas (Esto'k Gna) has been fighting the terminal for years; the construction site of Rio Grande LNG is part of their sacred Garcia Pasture. In 2020, local residents, the city of Port Isabel, and the Sierra Club
filed a lawsuit against FERC for authorizing the construction of the Rio Grande LNG and Rio Bravo Pipeline.
Why was there frontline opposition for years before OST invested? The proposed Rio Grande LNG facility will cover 984 acres. The Boca Chica Wildlife Refuge on the Rio Grande delta is about 6 miles east of the LNG export terminal.
Brownsville is the last major deep water port in Texas with no large fossil fuel projects. The terminal would be the largest single-source polluter in South Texas and would severely degrade local fishing, shrimping, and nature tourism industries.
This project is estimated to emit the equivalent emissions of 44 coal power plants every year!
The Oregon Treasury decided to invest in a financially troubled project.
What information was available at the time OST decided to invest in this GIP fund?
Was the investment consequential?
PESP notes the GIP investment provided the financing commitment needed for the project to reach the Final Investment Decision (FID), which allowed the project to move into the engineering and construction phase. The project manager Next Decade confirms
the importance of the FID in this project.
Appeals directly to the OIC
Carrizo and Comecrudo Tribal Leaders and other activists, supported by the Private Equity Stakeholder Project, traveled in September 2023 to speak with heart and facts to the Oregon Investment Council (OIC) about the devastating impact of this project. Their request? As a major investor and limited partner, pressure the fund to cancel the Rio Grande LNG Export Terminal project.
Nichole Heil of Private Equity Stakeholder Project spoke
again to the OIC a year after that first presentation. Through
a written September 4, 2024 public comment, she described the additional legal troubles and delay the project is facing.
August 2024 court order has derailed project
On August 6th, the D.C. Circuit Court issued a decision to vacate the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)’s approval of the Rio Grande LNG, which stops the project from moving forward. The company may appeal. The Court found FERC’s decision had serious procedural defects including a failure to “account for its updated environmental justice analysis.” The appeals court also ruled that FERC needed to consider the company’s Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) proposal as part of its environmental review of the terminal. The developer of Global Infrastructure Partners’ proposed Rio Grande LNG terminal, NextDecade, saw its stock plummet by over 40% after the court ruling. NextDecade announced on August 20 that it has withdrawn its application for a proposed Carbon Capture and Storage project at the terminal.
The CCS proposal is described in a
2/3/2023
Guardian article:
Carbon capture project is ‘Band-Aid’ to greenwash $10bn LNG plant, locals say.
The Demand
To the OST and OIC: pressure GIP partners to terminate this enormously destructive and financially risky project.