Local elected officials in the border city of Brownsville are receiving talking points and media strategy from the company developing Rio Grande LNG—the Central Park-sized liquefied natural gas (LNG) export plant project being built in wetlands outside nearby Port Isabel—as the company attempts to stymie a recent court order to halt its project, emails obtained by theThe company, the publicly traded Houston firm NextDecade, has helped Brownsville and Cameron County officials draft op-eds,
testimonials, and media statements by writing them outright or furnishing talking points or data to use when responding to media requests. NextDecade has also coordinated with the City of Brownsville and Cameron County in their filing of NextDecade lost its Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) authorization to develop Rio Grande LNG in August, as a result of a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, after nearly a year of construction. The LNG plant is replacing 984 acres of wetlands northeast of Brownsville in the sensitive Laguna Madre area, a crucial habitat for migratory birds and ocelots separated from the Gulf by the Padre barrier island. If built, the plant would liquefy and export natural gas from a fracking site near Kingsville, arriving by the yet-to-be-constructed, 137-mile Rio Bravo Pipeline. The pipeline, along with the export plant, is within the land claimed by the federally unrecognized tribe, the The court decision came in a lawsuit filed by the City of Port Isabel, the Sierra Club, the Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe of Texas, andthat FERC had not properly measured Rio Grande LNG’s environmental justice impacts or considered air quality data from a nearby monitor when the regulator(after a prior similar court ruling) the plant last year. “We appreciate the significant disruption may cause the projects,” the judges wrote. “But that does not outweigh the seriousness of the Commission’s procedural defect
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