Large Interstate Natural Gas Projects Progressing in Appalachia

by Duane Nichols on September 1, 2015

Dominion Resources Atlantic Coast Pipeline & Cove Point LNG Projects Progressing

From an Article by Casey Junkins, Wheeling Intelligencer, August 31, 2015

Wheeling, WV — Officials with Dominion Resources continue working to complete the $5 billion, 42-inch diameter, Atlantic Coast Pipeline that will ship natural gas southward from West Virginia to North Carolina, in addition to the $3.8 billion Cove Point natural gas exporting site in Maryland.

To Tim Greene, owner of Land and Mineral Management of Appalachia and a former WV Department of Environmental Protection inspector, getting both these projects up and running is vital to boosting prices for Marcellus and Utica Shale material.

“The Atlantic Coast Pipeline, the ET Rover Pipeline, the Mountain Valley Pipeline. We’ve got to get these up and running,” Greene said of the large interstate pipelines that are all in various stages of development. “The business is in the pipelines now.”  Still, all three of these projects are probably more than one year away from opening. Greene said producers likely will just have to make due in the meantime.

According to Dominion Chairman, President and CEO Thomas Farrell II, the firm is getting closer to filing for an official Federal Energy Regulatory Commission permit for the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, adding he hopes the company can do this in September. “Our Cove Point liquefaction project is also progressing on time and on budget. The project overall is about 31 percent complete and engineering at 90 percent is nearly complete,” Farrell said.

Mountain Valley Pipeline, an EQT Corp. project, would run 330 miles southward from the MarkWest Energy Mobley complex in Wetzel County to the Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Co. Zone 5 compressor station 165 in Virginia. The Rover Pipeline, meanwhile, will carry natural gas from northern West Virginia across Ohio and into Michigan.

Dominion operates the Blue Racer Natrium complex in Marshall County, as well as other natural gas processing infrastructure in both Ohio and West Virginia, which will now be part of the network used to send material to Cove Point for export so the gas can be shipped throughout the world, particularly to Asia.

Earlier this year, U.S. Department of Energy officials said they extensively and carefully reviewed Dominion’s project before signing off on it. Despite protests, the energy officials said exporting 770 million cubic feet per day from Cove Point for a period of 20 years is “not inconsistent with the public interest.”

“Once we get Cove Point, we can get new markets. It you don’t have markets, there’s no need for gas,” Greene said.

“The Cove Point facility has been on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay as an LNG import terminal for nearly 40 years,” Dominion Energy President Diane Leopold said. “While we are making a substantial investment to add export capabilities, we intend to keep unchanged our commitment to being a good neighbor and responsible steward of the environment.”

Dominion also increased its earnings for the period of April 1 through June 30. The Richmond, Va. firm’s profit jumped to $429 million, which is up from $361 million during the same time frame last year.

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NOTE: See also the Mid-Atlantic Responsible Energy Project (MARE Project), the Friends of Nelson (Nelson County, Virginia), and the Chesapeake Climate Action Network.

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CD Collins Offers Personal Story of Injuries from Pipeline Explosion

From an Article by the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, ohvec.org, August 31, 2015

CD Collins’ new novel Afterheat is loosely autobiographical and includes a pivotal experience in her life — when a pipeline explosion melted her skin.

From Kentucky, artist CD Collins has long been in contact with and support of OVEC. Her album Clean Coal Big Lie is like a soundtrack for our work.

She’s not only educating folks about the toll from coal. CD has a very personal and painful message about pipeline safety that folks fighting pipelines in their communities ought to hear and see, no matter how heartbreaking this is to watch.

The story of CD’s injury is included in the inspiring new documentary The End of the Line, which documents a diverse coalition of Kentucky farmers, families and faith-based activists as they work together to halt the proposed Bluegrass Pipeline.

See also: www.FrackCheckWV.net

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Julia Kasdorf September 2, 2015 at 4:52 pm

LANCASTER COUNTY in Pennsylvania

Residents from Martic, Conestoga, West Hempfield, and Lancaster City gathered at Marticville Middle School on Tuesday, August 11th to prepare for the launch of the Protect PA Quilt Project. Malinda Clatterbuck of Martic SOUL led the gathering.

This is opposition to the Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline project.

Approximately 40 people gathered to get involved in the project and discuss outreach plans, quilting logistics, and quilt square creation.

http://www.wearelancastercounty.com/aug11quilt

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NPR StateImpact PA September 2, 2015 at 9:39 pm

THE ATLANTIC SUNRISE PIPELINE

The Atlantic Sunrise pipeline is a project of Oklahoma-based Williams Partners. It’s one of many large-scale pipeline projects in the works in Pennsylvania.

Williams currently operates the Transco system which has over 10,000 miles of pipeline moving gas to other businesses, like utility companies and power plants.

The Atlantic Sunrise is a $3 billion expansion of the Transco system. It’s designed to move Marcellus Shale gas from Susquehanna County in northeastern Pennsylvania as far south as Alabama. If approved by federal regulators, it would cut through portions of 10 central Pennsylvania counties (Columbia, Lancaster, Lebanon, Luzerne, Northumberland, Schuylkill, Susquehanna, Wyoming, Clinton and Lycoming). It would carry the gas to markets along the eastern seaboard, including the Cove Point liquefied natural gas export terminal on the Chesapeake Bay.

The project has been met with considerable public push-back, especially in Lancaster County where nine protesters have been arrested.

In 2014, Williams began the pre-filing phase of the project with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)– the agency charged with siting and regulating interstate pipelines. Williams has already agreed to re-route about a quarter of the line in Pennsylvania based on public feedback.

Williams filed its formal application with FERC in March of 2015. If approved, it could be operational by mid-2017.

https://stateimpact.npr.org/pennsylvania/tag/atlantic-sunrise-pipeline/

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