Byย Lorraine Chow, EcoWatch.ย Reposted with permission fromย EcoWatch.
Builders of the controversialย Atlantic Coast pipelineย told federal authorities they will delay construction along 21 miles in West Virginia and 79 miles in Virginia until the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) issues a revised โincidental take statement,โ which limits the number of threatened orย endangered speciesย that might be accidentally killed or harmed during developmentย activities.
Lead developerย Dominion Energyย filed documents Tuesday with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in response to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals’ย ruling last week. The court sided with environmental groups and their lawyers that the FWS‘ initial review was not clear enough in the case of the $6.5 billion pipeline and vacated one of its keyย permits.
Environmentalists worry that the 600-mileย frackedย gasย pipelineย from West Virginia to North Carolina could pose risks for a rare bumblebee, the Roanoke logperch and Indiana and Northern long-eared bats and other threatened or endangered species. It willย alsoย cut through through forests, pristine mountains and involve the blasting, excavation andย removal of mountaintopsย along 38 miles of Appalachian ridgelines as part of theย construction.
In its letter to FERC, Dominion said construction will be avoided along those 100 miles in West Virginia and Virginia where protected species might be put at risk until the revised incidental take statement isย issued.
Dominion did not disclose the specific areas it will avoid โbecause this information contains the locations of sensitive species which are customarily treated as privileged and confidential,โ the company stated in a news release quoted byย The Exponent Telegram.
Theย Southern Environmental Law Centerย โ which argued on behalf of theย Sierra Club,ย Defenders of Wildlifeย andย Virginia Wilderness Committeeย at the appeals court โ believes all pipeline construction cannot continue without a validย permit.
โAccording to the Federal Regulatory Commission’s own certificate, FERC‘s previous notices issued to Atlantic Coast Pipeline developers to proceed are no longer valid,โ said senior attorney D.J. Gerken in aย statement. โIf what FERC is now saying is that developers can proceed to construction without the Fish and Wildlife Service’s valid permit, it is undermining its ownย requirements.โ
SELC recently sent aย letterย to FERC outlining the impact of an invalid permit on pipeline construction and requests it fulfill its obligations to stop further construction until it’sย resolved.
However, backers of the pipeline insist that construction will move forward as planned. โWe will continue to move forward with construction as scheduled and fully comply as required with all permits and agency requirements. We remain committed to taking all reasonable measures to protect the environment and the species while ensuring progress on a project that is essential to the economic and environmental well-being of the region,โ Dominionย stated.
As The Exponent Telegram noted, Dominion contends that the appellate court’s May 15 ruling only impacts construction in areas where at-risk species and their habitats may be present. Furthermore, the company believes the incidental take statement invalidated by the court does not impact the pipeline route or other requiredย permits.
โIt simply removes the shield that protects against an otherwise unlawful take, and for that reason, we will avoid any activities in any areas identified by (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service) that would be likely to adversely affect any of the listed species,โ Dominion said in the newsย release.
FERC will determine the next steps once the Atlantic Coast Pipeline documents are officially entered into the record, commission spokesperson Tamara Young-Allen told The Exponentย Telegram.
The Southern Environmental Law Center’s requests to halt all construction on the pipeline โare under consideration,โ Young-Allenย said.
In the meantime, Young-Allen noted, all previously issued notices to proceed are in effect, with the exception of the areas with threatened or endangered species habitat that the pipeline builders agreed toย avoid.
Nonetheless, grassroots resistance against pipelines is growing. Opponents of theย Mountain Valley Pipelinelaunched theย ninth aerial blockadeย this week to stop progress of the proposed natural gas pipeline running from northwest West Virginia to southernย Virginia.
Main image:ย Glass Hollow Overlook,ย in the central Virginia Blue Ridge Mountains. Credit:ย carobe,ย CC BY–NC–NDย 2.0
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