With the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) project clearing some major legal hurdles in recent weeks and construction resuming, it’s become increasingly likely that Appalachian gas producers will soon have 2 Bcf/d of new takeaway capacity, potentially as early as late 2023. However, the degree to which the pipeline will translate into higher production from the supply basin and improved supply access for the gas-thirsty, premium markets in the Southeast will largely depend on the availability of transportation capacity downstream of MVP. As such, the race is on to expand pipeline capacity from the pipe’s termination point at Williams’s Transco Pipeline Station 165 in southern Virginia, not only to deal with the impending influx of supply from MVP but also to move that gas to growing demand centers in Virginia and the Carolinas. MVP’s lead developer, Equitrans Midstream, is hoping to build an extension to the mainline — the MVP Southgate project — while Transco has designs of its own for capturing downstream customers. In today’s RBN blog, we provide an update on MVP and the various expansion projects in the works to move newly available supply to market.
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We’ll start with the latest developments on MVP, which, along with the growing gas-fired generation demand in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast, is the impetus for the other midstream projects we’ll discuss today. The biggest news of all, of course, is that the long-sought pipeline looks like it is finally happening. It took an “Act of Congress” and a decision from the highest court in the land — handed down by the Chief Justice, no less — but it’s looking more and more like MVP will be completed. We have chronicled MVP’s long, long journey in the years since it was proposed (most recently in Will It Go Round In Circles). It received its certificate from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in 2017 and construction began in early 2018. But as the project wandered through the permitting jungle, we saw permit after permit issued, only to be challenged by environmental groups and yanked away by a U.S. Court of Appeals, namely the Fourth Circuit Court.
However, just as a third set of permits were reversed by the Fourth Circuit earlier this year, Congress swooped in by ratifying an MVP clause as part of the “debt ceiling bill,” aka Section 324 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (FRA), which mandated the permitting and initial completion of MVP. To cover its bases, the provision also stripped the Fourth Circuit of jurisdiction, prohibited any further challenges to the state and federal permits, and, for those wanting to challenge the FRA provision itself, it restricted jurisdiction to the DC Circuit Court. The bill was signed into law June 3 and MVP resumed construction. However, in early July, the Fourth Circuit once again stayed key permits and halted construction of the project, pending review of several petitions challenging the permits and the constitutionality of Section 324 of the FRA. This time, with the FRA behind it, Equitrans/MVP made an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of MVP, staying the Fourth Circuit decisions and allowing MVP to resume construction. The same day that Chief Justice John Roberts issued the decision, the lower court heard oral arguments, and later dismissed the petitions for review, ending seven years of legal wrangling with environmental groups.
About the song
"Bring It On Home to Me" was written by Sam Cooke and appears as the sixth song on side two of Sam Cooke's second greatest hits album, The Best of Sam Cooke. Cooke wrote the song while touring, and it was a nod to his gospel roots, drawing heavily from Charlie Brown's 1959 single, "I Want to Go Home." It was recorded at RCA Studio 1 in Hollywood in April 1962, with Hugo and Luigi producing. "Having a Party" was the A-side of the single that was released in May 1962. Al Schmidt, who engineered the songs that were recorded at the same time in the same session, said the session was like a big party, with an 18-piece backing group and friends of Cooke all in the studio at the same time. Both sides were hits for Cooke, with "Bring It On Home to Me" going to #2 on the Billboard Hot R&B Sides and #13 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles charts. Many artists have covered the tune, and The Animals, Eddie Floyd, Lou Rawls, and Mickey Gilley all had hit records with the song. Personnel on the record were: Sam Cooke (lead vocals), Lou Rawls (backing vocals), Rene Hall, Clifton White, Tommy Tedesco (guitar), Adolphus Asbrook, Ray Pohlman (bass), Ernie Freeman (piano), William Green (saxophone), Frank Capps (drums, percussion), and 10 session musicians on violin, cello and viola.
The Best of Sam Cooke was the second hits collection for Cooke. It contains most of Cooke's hit singles from 1957-1962. Produced by Hugo and Luigi, the 12-song album was released in the fall of 1962. The singles, "Bring It On Home to Me," and "Having a Party" only appeared on this album.
Sam Cooke was an American singer and songwriter. Considered to be one of the most influential soul artists of all time, he is referred to as the "King of Soul." He got his professional start in the 1950s as the lead vocalist in the gospel group, the Soul Stirrers. He went solo in 1957 and released 29 charting singles in his eight-year solo career before being shot and killed by a motel manager in Los Angeles in December 1964 at the age of 33. Cooke was a central figure of the civil rights movement, with his song "A Change is Gonna Come" becoming an anthem of the movement. He released 14 studio albums, two live albums, 13 compilation albums and 49 singles. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice, once as a solo artist, and again as a member of the Soul Stirrers. He is a member of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, the National Rhythm and Blues Hall of Fame, has a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.