This article originally appeared in The Salt Lake Tribune. Read it in its entirety here.
City leaders in Oakland, Calif., have formally yanked the plug on a marine port project that Utah’s coal country hoped would connect its mining output with Asian markets.
In a correspondence exchange last month, the city notified project developer Phil Tagami it was terminating his firm’s lease for failure to meet construction milestones specified in the contract. Tagami responded with a 51-page notice of claim threatening to sue the city for allegedly sabotaging the project.
The proposed Oakland Bulk and Oversized Terminal, or OBOT, was to be the linchpin of a major redevelopment project for the decommissioned Oakland Army Base on the San Francisco Bay. It became mired in controversy three years ago, when Oakland officials got wind of the developer’s deal with coal-producing Utah counties.
Carbon, Emery, Sevier and Sanpete counties sought to borrow $53 million from the Utah Community Impact Board (CIB) to invest in the $250 million terminal in exchange for at least half the terminal’s 10 million-ton “throughput capacity.”
The deal outraged many Oakland residents, who believed the politically connected developer concealed coal’s central role in the state-of-the-art, rail-to-ship terminal and misleadingly billed it as a standard setter in environmental stewardship.
Heat-trapping carbon emissions from burning coal for electricity are considered a leading contributor to climate change. And East Bay residents were unhappy with the prospect of hundreds of coal-filled rail cars rattling through their densely populated cities.
But Oakland’s move to cancel its agreements with Tagami had little to do with coal, according to City Attorney Barbara Parker.
“This is about the developer’s failure to meet its obligations and perform the work it agreed to do. OBOT had years to move this project forward and has used every excuse in the book to justify its failure to perform,” she said in a written statement. “This terminal is a critical project that will be an economic engine for West Oakland, our entire city and the region. The city must move this project forward with partners who are able to get the job done.”
The city’s action effectively quashes the rural Utah counties’ hopes of exporting coal through Oakland.
Outgoing Carbon County Commissioner Jae Potter, an early proponent of the counties’ involvement in the project, did not return a phone message seeking comment.
Some activists in Utah applauded Oakland’s move.
This article originally appeared in The Salt Lake Tribune. Read it in its entirety here.