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Supreme Court Ruling Reinstates 303-Mile Natural Gas Pipeline Construction

[b]Supreme Court Ruling Reinstates 303-Mile Natural Gas Pipeline Construction, Dealing Blow to Climate Change Activists[/b]

[b]Mountain Valley Pipeline (Source: Natural Gas Intelligence)[/b]

In a victory for the fossil fuel industry and a setback for environmental activists, the United States Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that construction of the 303-mile Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) could resume.

This move effectively nullified the July 10 stay orders issued by the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in favor of plaintiffs Wilderness Society and Appalachian Voices, environmental activists that had instigated legal proceedings to halt the pipeline.

“The Wilderness Society and SELC allege violations of multiple environmental laws in connection with defective approvals by the United States Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management allowing the MVP to cross the Jefferson National Forest in Virginia and West Virginia,” according to the group’s news release.

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals suspended construction of the 303-mile pipeline that is almost 95% complete, despite legislative and executive support of the project with the passage of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, according to West Virginia Records.

Following the 4th Circuit ruling, the pipeline’s developers filed an emergency intervention request with Chief Justice John Roberts. This request was seen as a critical step to counter the appellate court’s decision, which was viewed by many in the industry as an overreach.

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Political leaders immediately responded to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn a lower court ruling on the Mountain Valley natural gas pipeline’s development.

“Today, the Supreme Court ended a campaign by activist judges to block good energy laws passed by Congress and signed by the President. This is a huge victory for American energy independence,” said Rep. Matt Rosendale
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I agree with clean energy but read how they get the gas out of the shale. This is my state wilderness. A gas line blew along I-81 just this week. Blow in the wilderness and you have a nice forest fire. Its always great for those that dont live near the pipeline. Come look at what they do to put it in the rocky mountains here.
They sold my state lies about the great jobs it brings to build the pipeline and look at the worker trailer villages- Almost all Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas truck tags.
I believe in a well balanced energy policy. We wont replace oil, gas, coal with clean energy any time soon, so who out there will turn the switch off to kill the coal fired power plant you get your electricity from. How you going to power your electric car? Your game pc or console. Tv? Get real, we are addicted to electricity, automobiles with powerful engines, airplanes, heat, A/C, etc. We would lose all these without our present power sources. We have to ween off the fossil fuels but like any addiction it has to be done with little or no horrible side effects.
Arguing about this side or that side gets us nowhere.
@Suggestmeone Good post. Unfortunately the concept of weening off of fossil fuels is not necessarily agreeable to some.
@soar2newhighs I hate coal and I am a deep rooted Mountaineer, my family lived working in and on mines. I see every day here how much coal and fracked gas has raped this state. I hate the shitty air I have to breath because I’m only 10 miles and 30 miles from two fully maxed out coal fired power stations. But where is the solar. We actually have a bunch of wind turbines stuck on the tops of alot of our scenic mountains but , oh yea, that all goes to the East Coast grid. None here.
So believe me, I want it gone, go green. I’m 100% behind all that but you won’t give up all those things and turn the fossil fuels off if it means no electricity, no transportation, no “modern conveniences “. We need to move on it but it will take time. It is something that we needed to begin transitioning off of fifty or seventy five years ago. As it is, we are really locked into going slow because of our own desires and ever present dollar going into someone’s bank account
Budwick · 70-79, M
@Suggestmeone [quote]We have to ween off the fossil fuels [/quote]

I agree but the weaning can not be forced. As alternative energy sources are developed and refined, the market will find winners and losers. Right now there are interesting devices but none are tenable .
[@Budwick
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