Posts Tagged ‘LNG Terminal’

Investing in Maine’s Strategic Location

Friday, March 19th, 2010

For too long we have thought of ourselves as being at the end of the line. That is a shortsighted view. Instead of just looking south to the rest of the United States, we should look north to Canada, our largest trading partner, east to Europe, and over the North Pole to Asia.

In a world that is increasingly interconnected, Maine is strategically located to provide access to population centers in the Northeast and Midwest U.S. As Canada develops its energy resources and a major international deepwater port in Halifax, Maine can position itself as a critical link in moving energy and goods through our state. However, we need to invest in our seaports, rail lines, roads and airports. We need to support the responsible development of LNG terminals and energy corridors and to undertake a public-private partnership to build an East-West highway.

Great opportunities to create new jobs, increase incomes and develop new revenue sources lie before us if we take full advantage of our location and invest in the infrastructure that will put us in the center of the action, instead of at the end of the line or sitting on the sidelines.


Eliot Offers Positions on Maine’s Natural Resources (Kennebec Journal)

Friday, March 12th, 2010

George Smith, executive director of the Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine, posted a review of the gubernatorial forum sponsored by the Natural Resources Network. The article appeared in The Kennebec Journal.

Below is the coverage of Eliot’s answers:

ENERGY

Cutler sees natural gas as an important ingredient in lowering costs, and he supports an LNG plant in Maine. He would shift home heating from oil to electricity. His most innovative idea — and it’s really an old one — is to create a public power authority.

NORTH WOODS

Cutler called for changes in the way we do easements, citing landowners’ concerns about liability and value. He said resolving these concerns is “centrally important to continuing uses in the North Woods.”

CONSOLIDATION OF STATE AGENCIES

Cutler elaborated on his opposition to consolidation, saying, “I’ve done government reorganizations at the federal level; some worked, some didn’t. Moving boxes around is not smart business. When you have agencies that relate directly to what centrally defines our state and manage our resources, mergers don’t make sense. What does make sense is changing the way we do business to reduce costs and tear down the wall of ‘no.’”

I really like that “wall of ‘no’” concept, but I would expand it to say no harm should be done to our environment as we use it to expand our economy.

Please click here to read the complete article here.