Eagle County, environmental groups seek review of plans for oil train terminal
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Eagle County, environmental groups seek review of plans for oil train terminal

Oct 13, 2023

News News | Aug 6, 2023

Eagle County and a coalition of environmental groups are urging the federal Bureau of Land Management to undertake a full review of the proposed expansion of an oil-train terminal in eastern Utah.

Owned by Utah’s largest oil producer, the Wildcat Loadout Facility near Price, Utah, has been used in recent years to transport limited amounts of crude oil by rail through Colorado to refineries along the Gulf Coast. The exported oil is currently trucked to the terminal from the Uinta Basin, the oil-rich region to the northeast, before being loaded into rail tank cars.

The terminal’s expansion is viewed by conservation groups as a potential interim or backup measure in connection to the proposed Uinta Basin Railway, the multibillion-dollar public-private partnership that aims to build a new 88-mile railroad to connect the region to the existing Union Pacific line near Price. That proposal has drawn fierce opposition from many in Colorado, including Eagle County, which has sued the Biden administration to reverse its approval.

In a letter sent to Greg Sheehan, the BLM’s Utah state director, attorneys representing the county wrote that it has “similar concerns” about the expansion of the Wildcat terminal.

The facility’s owners have applied to the agency for a permit to increase its capacity to 100,000 barrels of crude oil per day. That’s less than half of the projected capacity of the Uinta Basin Railway but more than triple the terminal’s current throughput.

“(The) proposal to expand the Facility’s capacity to transload Uinta Basin waxy crude oil by more than 230% would result in significant local, regional, and national impacts,” Eagle County’s attorneys wrote. “For communities downline of the Facility, including those located in Eagle County, this includes increasing the risk of oil train-related congestion, accidents, environmental hazards, and social and economic impacts.”

The BLM has initiated proceedings for an “environmental assessment” of the Wildcat expansion under the National Environmental Policy Act. Such analyses are much more abbreviated than environmental-impact statements for large projects, which can involve years of study and public feedback.

Eagle County’s letter argues that the potential impacts of the expansion, including downstream effects on greenhouse-gas emissions, demand a full EIS process.

“In light of the significant regional and national impact and the short- and long-term environmental effects of the proposed Facility, Eagle County requests that BLM prepare a full EIS to properly evaluate the potential significant environmental impacts, fully understand those impacts, and adequately inform the public regarding the proposed Facility,” says the letter.

In a separate letter to Sheehan, a coalition of 15 environmental groups — including several that have joined Eagle County in suing to block the Uinta Basin Railway — echoed the county’s EIS request.

“Because the Wildcat Loadout right-of-way amendment will have significant impacts upstream in the Uinta Basin … and downstream in Colorado and beyond,” the groups wrote, “BLM must prepare an EIS.”

Chase Woodruff covers the environment, the economy, and other stories for Colorado Newsline.

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Chase WoodruffColoradonewsline.comFrom left, Glenwood Springs Mayor Jonathan Godes, state Sen. Dylan Roberts, U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse, U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet and Colorado House Speaker Julie McCluskie participate in a press conference near Interstate 70 at the confluence of Grizzly Creek and the Colorado River to voice opposition to the Uinta Basin Railway project in April.