Washington Governor Jay Inslee has rejected a plan to site North America’s largest oil-by-rail terminal at the Port of Vancouver.
In a letter sent today to Kathleen Drew, chair of the state’s Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council (EFSEC), Gov. Inslee said he agreed with the EFSEC’s findings that the risks of siting the proposed Vancouver Energy Tesoro Savage oil terminal at the Port of Vancouver were greater than any potential benefits.
Inslee said the project, which would have brought 360,000 barrels of highly flammable Bakken crude oil into Vancouver each day, via trains rolling straight through Columbia River Gorge communities, including Washougal and Camas, was not in the public’s best interests.
The governor cited three main areas of concern: the risk that the project would not withstand a large magnitude earthquake; “the likelihood of an oil spill impacting the Columbia River or reaching the Pacific Ocean;” and the project’s capacity to cause harm to workers and nearby community members.
“I am seriously concerned by the risk that a potential fire or explosion at the facility may pose to workers and the community,” Inslee stated in his letter. “[EFSEC] found that emergency responders are unlikely to be able to successfully respond to a major incident at the facility. It is unacceptable to endanger the lives of workers, individuals incarcerated nearby, visitors to the facility, as well as others in the community.”