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Wolf asks to redo Illinois pipeline request
Company says it remains committed to the CO2 project
By Jared Strong - Iowa Capital Dispatch
Nov. 21, 2023 5:30 am, Updated: Nov. 21, 2023 7:45 am
Wolf Carbon Solutions has moved to withdraw its carbon dioxide pipeline permit application in Illinois to address concerns identified by state regulators.
“This voluntary action does not impact our commitment to the project and its stakeholders, or the ongoing regulatory processes, including with the Iowa Utilities Board and Army Corps of Engineers,” said Dean Ferguson, the company’s president.
Ferguson said Wolf will apply again early next year with the Illinois Commerce Commission for permission to build its pipeline system. About 90 miles of pipe in Eastern Iowa would connect to two ethanol plants — one in Cedar Rapids — to transport their captured carbon dioxide to Illinois for underground sequestration.
Wolf made its application in June for a certificate of authority to construct and operate its pipeline in Illinois. In October, a commission engineer recommended the application be denied for a number of reasons, including:
- It’s unclear whether all potentially affected landowners were notified of the proposal.
- Agreements with the ethanol plants had not been finalized, and Wolf had not secured a sequestration facility.
- Wolf had not made required applications to federal regulators.
- Wolf did not provide an emergency response plan in case of a pipeline rupture.
The engineer also said Wolf’s proposal appears to be at odds with the intent of an Illinois law that governs carbon dioxide pipelines: “Although I am not an attorney, in my opinion, (Wolf’s) proposed pipeline does not match the legislative purpose of the CO2 Act, which sought to promote and use Illinois coal,” according to the engineer’s written testimony.
Another engineer for the Illinois commission had similar concerns about a pipeline system proposed by Navigator CO2, which later abandoned its multistate proposal that included Iowa.
Wolf said in its motion to withdraw its application that it believes the application is “sufficient” but that “through a new application, it can address and moot many, if not all, of the concerns expressed.”
Wolf began its hazardous liquid pipeline permit process in Iowa in June 2022. Unlike other CO2 companies that made proposals in Iowa, Wolk said is does not intend to use eminent domain to acquire easements from unwilling landowners. It does not have yet a defined timeline for completion.
This article first appeared in the Iowa Capital Dispatch.