Arab Times

Top court gives nod to pipeline

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WASHINGTON, July 3, (AP): The Supreme Court sided with a pipeline company in a dispute with New Jersey over land the company needs for a natural gas pipeline.

Both liberal and conservati­ve justices joined to rule 5-4 for the PennEast Pipeline Co. The 116mile planned pipeline is to run from Pennsylvan­ia’s Luzerne County to Mercer County in New Jersey. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission had allowed the company’s project to move forward in 2018 by granting PennEast a so-called certificat­e of public convenienc­e and necessity, but lawsuits followed.

The company ultimately took New Jersey to court to acquire state-controlled land for its project. PennEast argued the commission’s greenlight­ing of its project allowed it to take New Jersey to court and to use eminent domain to acquire state-controlled properties. The Supreme Court agreed.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the majority that when FERC issues a a certificat­e of public convenienc­e and necessity, federal law authorizes the certificat­e’s holder “to condemn all necessary rights-of-way, whether owned by private parties or States.”

Roberts was joined by conservati­ve justices Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh and liberal justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor.

The decision from the high court doesn’t end litigation over the pipeline. A separate challenge to the pipeline involving New Jersey is pending in a federal appeals court in Washington.

During arguments in the case in April, a lawyer for the PennEast Pipeline Co. acknowledg­ed that if the company had lost at the Supreme Court, the 120-mile pipeline would “not be built at least in anything like its current configurat­ion.”

New Jersey, which opposes the pipeline project, had argued that PennEast couldn’t take the state to court to acquire the property - only the United States government can. The state argued that a federal law, the Natural Gas Act, does not explicitly authorize private lawsuits by private parties against states.

A federal appeals court sided with New Jersey while a lower court had sided with PennEast.

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