Gateway Pacific Terminal

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Proposed location of the Gateway Pacific Terminal

The Gateway Pacific Terminal was a proposed export terminal at Cherry Point (Lummi: Xwe’chi’eXen) in Whatcom County, Washington, along the Salish Sea shoreline. It was announced in 2011 and would have exported coal, but was opposed by local residents and the Lummi Nation, who had an ancestral village site at Cherry Point. The terminal project was rejected by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in 2016, ruling that it would infringe on the fishing rights of the Lummi Nation.

On February 28, 2011, the environmental review process for the Gateway Pacific Terminal commenced when SSA Marine applied for state and federal permits to build the $500 million project. [1] On the federal level, the Army Corps of Engineers is in charge of the environmental review process, and ultimately, the fate of the project.[2]

Proposal

The proposed terminal would have primarily exported coal, and if constructed would be the largest coal export terminal in North America.[3] The Gateway Pacific Terminal would include a 2,980-foot dock and allow up to 487 ships per year to berth.[4]

Opposition

Proposal rejected

References

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