Mountain Valley Pipeline LLC asked the U.S. Supreme Court in a filing on July 14 to vacate stays imposed by a federal court halting construction of a portion of its West Virginia-to-Virginia natural gas pipeline.
On July 10, an appellate court in Virginia halted construction of the last short section of the 303-mile (488 km) pipeline to run through the federally owned Jefferson National Forest. The court agreed with environmentalists opposed to the project that construction of that section should stop as the court reviewed its federal approvals.
Environmentalists say the project would harm soil and water quality in the forest and increase the use of natural gas, a leading fossil fuel and greenhouse gas emitter.
Approval of the Mountain Valley project has long been supported by conservative Democratic Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a key swing vote in the Senate and one of the largest recipients of in Congress of donations from fossil fuel companies. Approval of Mountain Valley was included in the debt limit deal struck in May between President Joe Biden, a Democrat, and House of Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy, a Republican.
The pipeline, which had received authorization from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in June to restart construction, is considered key to unlocking more gas supplies from Appalachia, the nation's biggest shale gas-producing basin.
Mountain Valley said in the filing that the appellate court lacked authority to stay the construction because the debt deal approved by Congress said the pipeline was in the national interest and "expressly stripped all courts" of jurisdiction to review decisions by federal agencies over its approval.
Mountain Valley is owned by units of energy company Equitrans Midstream—the lead partner building the pipe—NextEra Energy, Consolidated Edison, AltaGas and RGC Resources.
The project is one of several that have been delayed by regulatory and legal fights with environmental and local groups in recent years.
Recommended Reading
Diamondback’s Viper Buys $1.1B in Permian Mineral, Royalty Interests
2024-09-11 - Diamondback subsidiary Viper Energy is spending $1.1 billion on a series of Permian Basin mineral and royalty acquisitions from Tumbleweed Royalty, which was formed by the executives behind Double Eagle Energy.
Oxy: Ecopetrol Declines to Buy Interests in Permian E&P CrownRock
2024-08-01 - Following discussions between Permian joint venture partners Occidental Petroleum and Ecopetrol, the Colombian oil company declined to acquire a 30% stake in CrownRock LP’s Midland Basin assets.
Exxon Explores Sale of Conventional Permian Basin Assets
2024-08-27 - Exxon Mobil, which closed a $60 billion takeover of Pioneer Natural Resources this year, is exploring selling legacy conventional assets in the Permian Basin.
CEO: Vital to Chase Less-developed Delaware Zones with $1.1B Deal
2024-07-29 - With the acquisition of Point Energy Partners, Vital Energy is growing in the Texas Delaware Basin—where Vital has already done several deals and has worked to optimize drilling and spacing designs.
Prairie Operating Gets Output, Acreage Boost from Nickel Road M&A
2024-10-02 - Prairie Operating closed an acquisition of acreage and production in Weld County, Colorado, where the D-J Basin player is drilling its first Niobrara horizontals.
Comments
Add new comment
This conversation is moderated according to Hart Energy community rules. Please read the rules before joining the discussion. If you’re experiencing any technical problems, please contact our customer care team.