NJ Governor Said He Wants to Stand up to Fossil Fuel Industry: So Will He Stop the PennEast Pipeline?
13 February 2018
Governor Phil Murphy, still less than a month into his first term, has articulated a bold vision for New Jersey’s environmental and energy future and indicated that he wants to stand up to the fossil fuel industry. He supports a permanent ban on fracking at the Delaware River Basin. He brought New Jersey back into the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a nine-state cap-and-trade agreement. And he’s called for 100% clean energy in the state by 2050.
But a big question mark looms over Murphy: will he stop the PennEast Pipeline?
PennEast is a proposed 120-mile pipeline that will deliver fracked natural gas from Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, to Mercer County, New Jersey. As the new Public Accountability Initiative report shows, it’s positioning itself to influence the new administration, with five lobbyists in the Murphy transition, including a former top advisor to Cory Booker.
PennEast’s Attempt to Sway Murphy through Lobbyists and Donations
Two key owners of the pipeline, New Jersey Resources and South Jersey Industries, are based in New Jersey, and New Jersey’s Department of Environmental Protection has to approve the pipeline before construction can begin.
In other words, what happens in New Jersey, and what Governor Murphy chooses to do, will ultimately decide the pipeline’s fate.
It’s no surprise, then, that PennEast is trying to sway Murphy in a number of ways, most notably by filling his transition team with five pipeline lobbyists.
PennEast coughed up $260,270—over a quarter-million dollars—for lobbying in 2016 alone (2017 numbers should be available soon). Here are the lobbyists, all from two powerful firms, Princeton Public Affairs Group and Mercury LLC, who made it into Murphy’s transition committees:
One striking thing about these pipeline lobbyists is their close ties to the New Jersey Democratic Party, including U.S. senators, former governors and state legislators. The Democrats control New Jersey by large majorities. The party is divided over fracking and fossil fuel pipelines, with a rising swath of the Democratic base opposing them.
While these are just five of PennEast’s lobbyists, they have nearly a dozen more revolving-door lobbyists in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, most with close ties to powerful politicians and regulatory entities. And if that wasn’t enough, a Koch brothers-backed lobbying group is lobbying for PennEast at the federal level.
Furthermore, just five PennEast execs and lobbyists showered Murphy with over $23,000 in campaign contributions during his gubernatorial run.
Pipeline Profiteering, Powerful Ties and Regulatory Conflicts
While attempts by PennEast lobbyists to sway New Jersey politics may be news enough, our report lays out other unsettling findings about PennEast. These include:
Decision Time
Despite last month’s FERC approval, the Penneast Pipeline is reeling from a string of setbacks. Its application for a water quality permit was rejected on February 1 by the NJ Department of Environmental Protection—and this comes upon a previous rejection last June. PennEast was told it needs to reapply for the permit yet again. And recently the NJ attorney general rejected as insufficient PennEast’s right-of-way request to build the pipeline through several parcels of land.
This controversial, unpopular pipeline is clearly on the defensive.
With a new green governor in office, New Jersey has a rare opportunity to shut down the pipeline and project a future that goes beyond destructive fossil fuels. So what will Murphy do?
Read the full report: The Power Behind the Pipelines: PennEast Pipeline.