August 15, 2018
County hears plan for natural gas line
Chesapeake Utilities seeks exclusive deal; ECI
likely anchor user
By Richard Crumbacker
Crisfield-Somerset County Times
PRINCESS ANNE — Dover-based Chesapeake
Utilities is again asking the County Commissioners to sign an exclusive
franchise agreement that will support its efforts to bring natural gas into
Somerset County.
It’s encouraged that ECI is serious about
converting from wood chips to natural gas to power its steam and electricity
generating plant, and in turn other large users like UMES, Mountaire and Perdue
would tap into the line as well.
Chesapeake serves over 20,000 customers in
five Maryland counties including Wicomico, Dorchester and Worcester. Its
subsidiary Sandpiper Energy purchased Eastern Shore Gas which served Ocean City
and West Ocean City with propane and that system is being converted to natural
gas, with a line running under Assawoman Bay into the town itself.
“Currently we’re about 90 percent
residential,” said Dean Holden, manager of business development. “
In dustrial, is a very small slice” with agri-business a key part.
But what prompts an expansion of service, are
commitments by commercial and industrial customers. Chesapeake ran a line 13.5
miles to Lewes, Del., in 2012 when anchors including Beebe Healthcare, Allen
Harim Foods and Perdue were ready to convert to natural gas.
Likewise in 2015 in Cecil County, a line 5.7
miles long was extended to serve a mushroom grower. Two years later a medical
marijuana grower located its facility on the gas corridor, and next year
another mushroom operation expects to open.
“We see that time and time again,” Mr. Holden
said. “The availability of natural gas brings business in when you have
economical energy.”
In Somerset County, the company sees ECI, UMES
and agri-business as the reason to install a natural gas distribution hub in
Eden. Last year the prison requested information about alternatives to its
chip-burning power plant. Mr. Holden said Chesapeake received a letter of
interest last month from the Department of Public Safety and Correctional
Services stating that if gas was available it would make “every effort” to
connect.
“That
has provided us an anchor load,” Mr. Holden said, “a customer large enough to
bring natural gas into Somerset County.” And while “it’s not a contract” the
prison uses “a lot of energy and they are important enough for us to
substantiate the investment.”
And with Mountaire and Perdue nearby, “ we
hope to serve them as well,” and they have provided Chesapeake their propane
reports so a cost-benefit analysis can be prepared.
The franchise agreement is necessary to
protect Chesapeake’s investment of $25 to $30 million, Mr. Holden said, and
would be exclusive for at least two years. Once that is secured a similar
arrangement would be sought from the Princess Anne Commissioners.
Public Service Commission approval would also
be necessary to serve this area.
Currently a company is surveying and
estimating the cost of installing a transmission line some 12 miles and it
might take approximately two years from start to finish. High pressure gas ends
at Commerce Street in Salisbury, and while Fruitland is served through a local
distribution system, Mr. Holden said there is not enough pressure to build off
of it.
“It’s very much needed,” said County
Administrator Doug Taylor, and Commissioner Jerry Boston said “It sounds like a
good project” but President Randy Laird said the board was not immediately
prepared to sign the agreement.
Since at least 2007 county leaders have been
trying to attract a natural gas provider to come here. In November 2011, Shane
Breakie, director of energy services with Chesapeake who also attended last
week’s meeting, met with the commissioners but a draft franchise agreement was
never finalized.
Two years later in 2013 a non- exclusive
franchise with Somerset Utilities was approved, but that company dissolved and
following a federal district court order its assets were taken over by a
company in Denver.
Mr. Holden said exclusivity for at least two
years is necessary so a competitor does not come in with an alternative
project, leaving Chesapeake out a substantial investment.