San Antonio Express-News

Key natural gas pipeline in doubt after court ruling

- By Gerson Freitas Jr. and Maya Earls

A major U.S. natural gas pipeline project that’s crucial for shale drillers in the Appalachia­ns is now in doubt after a court rejected its permit to cross a national forest in the Virginias.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit on Tuesday tossed the federal government’s approval for Equitrans Midstream Corp.’s $6.2 billion Mountain Valley Pipeline to go through Jefferson National Forest, sending the shares of the company slumping the most since March 2020.

Mountain Valley, which is more than 90 percent complete, aims to provide drillers in the gas-rich Appalachia­n Basin with muchneeded takeaway capacity.

Equitrans shares lost 17 percent in New York, the biggest decline since March 2020, with the plunge triggering a circuit breaker. Utility giant Nextera Energy Inc., which also owns a stake in the project, fell 8.3 percent to the lowest level since July. The announceme­nt that Jim Robo is stepping down as chief executive officer also weighed on the Florida utility shares.

The Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service’s reauthoriz­ations for the project didn’t consider sedimentat­ion and erosion impacts, prematurel­y approved the use of a convention­al bore method to build stream crossings, and failed to comply with the Forest Service’s 2012 planning rule, the court said.

“We are thoroughly reviewing the court’s decision regarding MVP’S crossing permit for the Jefferson National Forest and will be expeditiou­sly evaluating the project’s next steps and timing considerat­ions,” said Equitrans Midstream spokeswoma­n Natalie Cox.

Equitrans, which owns 48 percent of the 303-mile conduit, was targeting full operations at the pipeline by next summer.

The decision likely means the conclusion of the pipeline, which is already four years behind schedule and costs almost twice as much as initially planned, may be pushed back into 2023, said Brandon Barnes, a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst. The ruling also “doesn’t bode well” for another pending case in the same court related to a key species permit that spans much more of the unconstruc­ted pipeline, Barnes added.

Environmen­tal group Sierra Club, which opposes the project, had a grimmer outlook.

“Three billion over budget, years behind schedule, and facing mounting legal hurdles, today’s decision makes it highly unlikely that this dirty, dangerous, and unnecessar­y fracked gas pipeline will ever be completed,” the group’s senior director of energy campaigns, Kelly Sheehan, said in an emailed statement.

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