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9 April 2005. One of the Eyeball series.


http://cryptome.org/blm040805.txt

[Federal Register: April 8, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 67)]
[Notices]               
[Page 18044-18047]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr08ap05-84]                         

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
 
Conservation Helium Sale

AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice Implementing a Supplemental Conservation Helium Sale.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

[Excerpt]

SUMMARY: The purpose of this action is to continue implementation of 
the terms of the Helium Privatization Act (HPA) of 1996 dealing with 
the disposal of the Conservation Helium Reserve. The HPA requires the 
Department of the Interior to offer for sale, beginning no later than 
2005, a portion of the Conservation Helium stored underground at the 
Cliffside Field, north of Amarillo, Texas. The Department of the 
Interior, in consultation with the private helium industry, has 
determined that private companies, with refining capacity along the 
crude helium pipeline, will need a supply of helium in excess of that 
available from their own storage accounts and that available from crude 
helium extractors in the region. Given the current market, Conservation 
Helium sold in this sale will cause minimal market disruption.

http://www.counterpunch.org/brasch10112003.html

Facing a McBlimp Attack

By: Walter Brasch - October 11 / 13, 2003

[Excerpt]

Except for some coastal surveillance for subs during World War II and an occasional rescue operation, blimps weren't the attack craft military leaders once envisioned, mostly because even a blind squirrel with a nut could hit something that large and that slow. The last of the 140 Navy blimps was retired in 1962. But this was 2003. I demanded evidence that the government was going retro-air. 

Marshbaum looked around, saw that no one was watching us, then took a crumpled news article from his back pocket. "See!" he said, thrusting it at me. According to the article, the Navy has begun testing a blimp, first in Virginia, now in San Diego, as surveillance in the war against terror. Floating at 40 miles per hour, about 2,000 feet above the earth, the white airships would be used to locate enemy divers, submerged mines and, maybe, drug smugglers, illegal immigrants crossing America's borders, and seedy lawyers having sex with the spouses of jailed clients.

The Navy projects three 200-foot helium-filled airships, each at a cost of about $12 million, for every major American city.  But that's not all the Navy plans. In addition to the four-person low-level surveillance blimps, it's allocating about $40 million for a remote-controlled prototype that can cruise at 65,000 feet. This 500-foot long space carrier will have a volume of more than five million cubic feet of helium, about 20 times that of current blimps. It will take a lot of helium to float these airships.

We need to look no further than the Bush Dome Reservoir near Amarillo, Texas. Beneath its 20 square miles, the government has stockpiled about 30 billion cubic feet of helium, which it has been selling to private enterprise. 

"The conspiracy isn't even hidden," said Marshbaum. "After the government sells helium to private industry, it then buys blimps from private companies with White House ties. Then since blimps need helium, the government buys it from private sources." "The only thing to be determined," said Marshbaum, "is how much profit Halliburton will receive." 

"It's business as usual in the Bush White House," I said. "It'd be a real stretch for them to claim that there was an imminent threat to national security from blimps. It's not as if Fugi possessed weapons of mass destruction." 

http://www.agiweb.org/gap/legis106/helium.html

American Geological Institute Government Affairs Program

Update on Helium Legislation: 1-2-97

[Excerpts]

For an inert gas, helium managed to stir up a great deal of activity and controversy the past two years. No fewer than 44 bills were introduced in the 104th Congress dealing with helium in one way or the other. The bulk of these were efforts to get the federal government out of the business of refining helium. For many decades, the U.S. Bureau of Mines had responsibility for maintaining a crude helium storage facility and refining helium for use by the federal government. The program was intended to pay off a loan from the Treasury Department through sales of refined helium, but lagging sales failed to produce the expected revenue, and a "helium debt" developed of over $1 billion. Although the debt was between two federal agencies, many in Congress and the Administration viewed the debt as an example of government waste, and the private helium industry was eager to obtain the federal contracts held by the Bureau of Mines.

The legislation that eventually was signed into law, H.R. 4168 (Public Law 104-273), was sponsored by Rep. Christopher Cox (R-CA). That bill calls for the shutdown of federal helium refining operations and dismantling of the facility over the next two and a half years and also calls for the selling off of the crude helium reserves starting in the year 2005 and continuing for ten years provided that such sales do not cause undue disruption of the market and provided that a study to be conducted by the National Academy of Sciences* finds that doing so will be in the nation's strategic interest. The legislation was signed by President Clinton on October 9, 1996.

* http://books.nap.edu/catalog/9860.html

[Volume description]

The Impact of Selling the Federal Helium Reserve, Committee on the Impact of Selling the Federal Helium Reserve, Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications, Commission on Engineering and Technical Systems, National Research Council, 98 pages.

The Helium Privatization Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-273) directs the Department of the Interior to begin liquidating the U.S. Federal Helium Reserve by 2005 in a manner consistent with minimum market disruption and at a price given by a formula specified in the act. It also mandates that the Department of the Interior enter into appropriate arrangements with the National Academy of Science to study and report on whether such disposal of helium reserves will have a substantial adverse effect on U.S. scientific, technical, biomedical, or national security interests.

This report is the product of that mandate. To provide context, the committee has examined the helium market and the helium industry as a whole to determine how helium users would be affected under various scenarios for selling the reserve within the act s constraints.

The Federal Helium Reserve, the Bush Dome reservoir, and the Cliffside facility are mentioned throughout this report. It is important to recognize that they are distinct entities. The Federal Helium Reserve is federally owned crude helium gas that currently resides in the Bush Dome reservoir. The Cliffside facility includes the storage facility on the Bush Dome reservoir and the associated buildings pipeline.

The Clinton Administration originally proposed privatization of the helium reserve, estimating a $27 million reduction in outlays over FY96-2000. Sale of the reserve was also an assumption in Congress's Fiscal Year 1996 Budget Resolution. The Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources held a hearing on pending helium legislation in July of 1995. A similar hearing was held earlier by the House Committee on Resources. Two of the bills before the Senate were nearly identical: S.45, introduced by Senator Feingold (D-WI), and S. 738, introduced by Senator Thomas (R-WY). Both bills are also similar to H.R. 2906, introduced by Rep. Christopher Cox (R-CA).

The final enacted legislation, H.R. 4168, also introduced by Cox, represents a compromise between Congress and the Administration. The helium industry enthusiastically supported S. 45 and S. 738 but gave only lukewarm support to the Administration proposal, S. 898, calling it "a step in the right direction." S. 45 and S. 738 were both opposed by the Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers union, representing approximately 200 workers at the Federal helium refining facility near Amarillo, Texas. The American Physical Society issued a policy statement expressing concern about selling off the helium stockpile.

A brief description of helium reform is followed by a more detailed discussion of the helium program and legislation

Helium is a byproduct of natural gas production and, unless extracted, is lost to the atmosphere when the gas is burned . Although we no longer require helium for a fleet of dirigibles as we did when the original act was passed in 1925, the federal program now supplies helium to NASA for purging and pressurizing rocket engines (in particular, the space shuttle), and to both the Departments of Defense and Energy for various uses. Commercial uses of helium include magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) medical equipment and as a refrigerant to promote superconductivity in metals.

The federal helium program has spawned a successful private helium industry which now supplies 90% of the commercial market for refined helium. The emergence of a healthy private sector has led to the current calls for privatizing the federal program. All of the current reform proposals call for selling off federal helium refining operations, charging fair-market value for short-term storage of helium in the federal reserves and drastically reducing the reserve through gradual stockpile sales. ...

The federal market dwarfs the commercial market, therefore the Administration has proposed a more gradual transition to minimize the disruption to federal customers. With respect to stockpile sales, the Administration would begin gradual sales next year and continue though 2020. The other bills would sell off all but a two-year's supply starting in 2005 and concluding in 2015. In all cases, the sales would take place in a manner that would not cause "undue disruption" to the helium market. ...

Additional Background

The Helium Act of 1925 created a federal strategic helium reserve administered by the U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) in order to ensure that necessary reserves were maintained for the military's dirigible program. This act was last amended in 1960, greatly expanding the program to include refining capabilities and to provide funds in the form of a loan from the Treasury Department to buy crude helium. The unpaid principal and interest on this loan now totals $1.4 billion, and opponents of the program point to the debt as evidence of the program's failure. Proponents of the program, however, argue that the debt is merely a paper transaction between federal agencies with no meaning and that in its absence the program runs a surplus every year.

Dirigibles are not in demand as much these days, but the Federal government still has a number of strategic uses of helium, including the space shuttle program at NASA and other programs at DOE, the Air Force, and the Navy. Commercial uses include cryogenic cooling (down to -475 F), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) equipment, and the traditional use as a lifting gas. Although the government still needs purified helium, many in and out of government feel that the government should not be in the refining business, arguing that the private helium industry, which already provides 90% of the nation's refined helium needs, can do the job better and more cheaply.

The industry also contends that helium is the only product that the government currently insists on producing and supplying to itself.

President Clinton, in this year's State of the Union address, added his own call for privatizing the federal helium refinery. Whereas the private helium industry is eager to take over the federal government's role in refining helium (which is a non-renewable by-product of gas field development), it wants the crude helium reserve to remain in federal hands, because any large sale of crude helium from the reserve could result in a market price decrease.

The industry also opposes Administration proposals to forgive the helium debt, because it helps to maintain the price of helium. Industry-supported bills have been introduced in both the House (H.R. 873) and Senate (S. 45 and S. 738) this Congress that are similar to one that unanimously passed the House Resources Committee last Congress.

These bills will reduce the federal bureaucracy, but it is not at all clear that they will save the government any money or reduce the deficit. The President's earlier reinvention proposals, which were introduced in the Senate last year by Senator Johnston as part of S. 1637 but did not pass, would go much further in saving the government money.

The President's current proposal represents an intermediate position. The three principal issues addressed by all these bills are: the helium debt, federal refining facilities, and helium storage and reserves. *Helium debt* Following the 1960 amendments to the Helium Act, an interagency agreement between the Departments of Interior and Treasury provided for a $252 million loan to pay for purchases of crude helium. These purchases were intended to ensure that the nation retained an adequate stockpile. The loan was to be paid back with interest in 25 years, a date that was extended 10 years to 1995, but sales of refined helium have not met expectations in part because of the program's successful development of a robust private industry, and the principal with interest now stands at $1.4 billion. Although this amount is often pointed to as proof that the federal helium program is a wasteful drain on government funds, revenues from the program actually exceed operating expenses by $10 million a year.

More importantly, the GAO, OMB, and the DOI Inspector General all agree that because the loan was between federal agencies, it is a paper transaction which could be forgiven with no impact on the budget deficit -- in other words, it is funny money.

*Refining facilities*

The USBM owns and operates several facilities in the vicinity of Amarillo, Texas: a helium extraction and purification plant and a helium cylinder and trailer-filling facility at Exell, Texas; a crude helium reservoir and a metering and maintenance station at Cliffside Field; and a 425-mile pipeline connecting the two. The operation employs around 200 workers, who are represented by the Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers International Union (OCAW). The OCAW along with the AFL-CIO support the President's earlier reinvention proposals but oppose privatization of the refining facilities. They have raised the concern by federal buyers, including NASA, that selling the facilities would result in higher prices and a disruption in service.

There is also some question about the private sector's ability to provide ultrapure Helium 4, which is currently a unique service of the federal program. USBM sales of refined gaseous helium currently make up all of the federal market and about 10% of the commercial market. The other 90% of the commercial market is supplied by private industry, which received its start because of the original loan to buy crude helium for the strategic reserve.

The private industry's dominance of this market is somewhat misleading, because the federal market represents 75% of the total market, dwarfing the commercial market for refined gaseous helium. On the other hand, private industry completely dominates the much larger market for refined liquid helium.

*Helium reserves*

The current reserves are over 34,000 million cubic feet (MCF). Currently, the government uses 300 MCF/year and the total world market is 3,000 MCF/year. Assuming these levels of consumption, the reserve is enough to serve the government's needs for 100 years or the world's needs for 10 years.

The federal reservoir at Cliffside Field, which is located beneath a salt dome, is also used by private industry for short-term storage of helium resulting from seasonal fluctuations in the market. Private industry pays fees, but they are well below the cost of the services provided, and all of the reform proposals include raising these fees to more equitable levels.

*Legislation in the 103rd and 104th Congress*

In the 103rd Congress, Senator Johnston introduced S. 1637, which represented the Clinton Administration's Reinventing Government proposals for the Department of Interior. Title 1 concerns improving the Federal Helium Program. Section 101 of this title provides for efficiency improvements and fee changes in order to compensate fully for all costs incurred. It also provides that sales of helium from the reserve are not to cause "undue disruption of the usual markets" and are to be sold at prices "comparable to helium sold by private industry". Section 102 calls for cancelling the Fund's outstanding debt and conducting a study of how to improve the program's operations. This bill did not pass the Senate last year. On the first day of the new Congress, Senator Feingold (D-WI) submitted S. 45, which requires the Secretary of Energy to sell "Federal real and personal property held in connection with activities carried out under the Helium Act" within one year of enactment. A virtually identical bill was passed unanimously last Congress by the House Resources Committee and has been reintroduced as H.R. 873. Senator Thomas recently introduced a very similar bill, S. 738. All of these bills are wholly supported by the helium industry.

This act requires that the Secretary "shall cease producing, refining, and marketing refined helium and shall cease carrying out all other activities relating to helium" previously allowed by the Helium Act one year after the act goes into effect. In contrast, sales of the nation's stockpile of crude helium would not begin until the year 2005, and all but 600 million cubic feet (MCF) of the nation's stockpile of crude helium would then be sold off by 2015. The sale is conditional on a price evaluation clause requiring that the reserves be sold at or above the current market price (adjusted for inflation) in order to ensure that the present debt is paid.

The Cliffside Field storage facility is to be maintained by USBM in order to store the remaining 600 MCF of reserves. ...



Eyeballing
the
Helium Reserve

The Impact of Selling the Federal Helium Reserve
http://books.nap.edu/catalog/9860.html

MapQuest

http://www.terraserver-usa.com/usgsentry.aspx?T=1&S=15&Z=14&X=37&Y=617&W=3&qs=%7cexell%7ctx%7c

http://www.terraserver-usa.com/usgsentry.aspx?T=1&S=14&Z=14&X=73&Y=1232&W=3&qs=%7cExell%7ctx%7c

http://www.terraserver-usa.com/usgsentry.aspx?T=1&S=13&Z=14&X=144&Y=2466&W=3&qs=%7cexell%7ctx%7c

http://www.terraserver-usa.com/usgsentry.aspx?T=1&S=12&Z=14&X=289&Y=4933&W=3&qs=%7cexell%7ctx%7c

http://www.terraserver-usa.com/usgsentry.aspx?T=1&S=10&Z=14&X=1153&Y=19733&W=3&qs=%7cexell%7ctx%7c

http://www.terraserver-usa.com/usgsentry.aspx?T=1&S=10&Z=14&X=1159&Y=19739&W=3&qs=%7cexell%7ctx%7c