Above Photo: Guy Goetzinger/Flickr
Loss of Endangered Species Act Review is Yet Another Setback for Controversial Fracked Gas Pipeline
RICHMOND, Va. — Today, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals threw out a permit that the Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP) needs to continue construction. A three-judge panel vacated the United States Fish and Wildlife Service’s (FWS) review of the ACP’s impacts related to the Endangered Species Act (ESA), ruling that the FWS “lost sight of its mandate” when rushing the review for the pipeline instead of protecting threatened wildlife. This is the second time that a court has tossed the ACP’s ESA permit, coming a year after the same court ruled the FWS did not properly evaluate the level of harm the pipeline would have on endangered species. The Sierra Club was represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center in this case.
The ACP has been controversial since it was first proposed and has faced several legal setbacks, leaving its future in doubt.
In response, Sierra Club Attorney Nathan Matthews released the following statement:
“The Atlantic Coast Pipeline threatens endangered species, clean water, and human health for a fracked gas pipeline that we don’t even need. The polluting corporations behind this dirty, dangerous project rushed their application process because they wanted to make a quick buck, and the government agencies tasked with protecting our water, wildlife, and health were all too happy to fast-track the reviews for them, but now their chickens are coming home to roost. We have said all along that many of the ACP’s permits were issued in flawed, rushed processes, and time after time, the courts have agreed.”