KEYPORT, N.J. (AP) — A major pipeline that would have moved natural gas through New Jersey and under two bays to New York has been killed, but another plan to transport liquefied gas from Pennsylvania by tanker truck is moving forward. Environmentalists who had fought both projects reacted Monday to the mixed bag they were handed on Friday when the two proposals took differing pathways with federal regulators. That was the day that Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Williams Companies, which owns a nearly 10,000-mile (16,000-kilometer) expanse of pipelines called Transco, allowed its Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline project to end. Williams told the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission it was allowing a key construction application to expire, saying it would not seek an extension for it. The decision heartened a wide group of environmental and community groups who had fought the proposal for eight years, saying it would further the burning of fossil fuels and contribute to climate change, while also degrading air and water quality and creating safety concerns in communities along its route. |
FM rebuts U.S. official's remarks on Chinese cars as false narrativeSceientific exploration well first to break 10,000China Energy's massive hydropower station to open in March 2024Energy cooperation empowers Belt and RoadWhat Chinese modernization means for multinationals eyeing new opportunities in China?Huawei embraces allChinese automakers stand out at GenevaIdeas to brighten biz climate mark two sessionsXi Inspects Jingdezhen, Shangrao in East China's Jiangxi ProvinceChinese companies shine at MWC