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The 2015 California drought brought pipeline proposals back to the public consciousness, abetted by celebrities Rush Limbaugh and William Shatner, [7] the latter proposing a Kickstarter campaign to raise $30 billion to fund such a pipeline from Washington state. [8] As of 2013, there were no interstate water pipelines to California. [9]
El Paso Natural Gas (EPNG) is an American company and a 10,140-mile pipeline system consisting of a system of natural gas pipelines that brings gas from the Permian Basin in Texas and the San Juan Basin in New Mexico and Colorado to West Texas, New Mexico, Nevada, California, and Arizona. It also exports some natural gas to Mexico. [1]
I-5 - SR 16 Tacoma/Pierce County HOV Program, Tacoma, Washington (Interstate 5 in Washington) 2002–2013 $6.5 billion [4] $8.5 billion San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge East Span Replacement, San Francisco/Oakland, California: 1988–2002 $5.0 billion [5] Mon–Fayette Expressway, southwest Pennsylvania and northern West Virginia: 2012–2019
The Kerr Bill was an attempt to deregulate natural gas prices in the United States by amending the Natural Gas Act of 1938 to specifically remove any right of the Federal Power Commission to regulate the price charged for natural gas going into interstate pipelines. It was strongly backed by oil and gas companies. [1]
This contradictory approach could lead to a staggering 900% increase in bills by 2050 for Californians remaining on gas, as a shrinking pool of customers pays for under-used pipelines. California ...
The average cost of a home in Sagaponack is $4.75 million, and the overall cost of living is 47.1% higher than the U.S. average. Groceries, healthcare and utilities are 26.9%, 25.2% and 25.4% ...
That allowed the compact to be concluded with a guarantee that the upper basin states of Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico could pass 7.5 million acre feet a year — measured as 10-year ...
El Paso generated profits of $283,000 during the pipeline's first year of operation but the Depression-era economy threatened to quash the venture. Fortunately, the city of El Paso continued to buy Frost's and Kayser's gas. The company was able to pay its debts and to expand its pipeline system during the early 1930s.