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United States Mountain Valley passes test after fixing leakage in WV-VA natgas pipe

U.S. gas pipeline endeavor Mountain Valley Pipeline stated on Friday it repaired a sector of pipe that failed a water test previously in the month and will continue to prepare the longdelayed West VirginiaVirginia pipe for service.

The venture was on track to finish the $7.85 billion task by the end of May, U.S. energy firm Equitrans Midstream , the lead partner in the Mountain Valley endeavor, stated in late April.

Mountain Valley made its most current comments about the pipe repair in a filing with the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) on Friday.

Mountain Valley stated that since April 30, it had effectively finished hydrostatic screening for 269 miles of the project's 303-mile path.

Hydrostatic testing involves making use of water to pressure test the pipe for a defined time period, exposing all pipeline parts to a pressure that goes beyond the optimum allowable running pressure to guarantee all components will run securely prior to the introduction of gas into the pipe, Mountain Valley stated in the FERC filing.

Mountain Valley stated it notified federal and state firms on May 1 of a hydrostatic testing failure at milepost 245.95.

Ever since, the company said it has successfully performed hydrostatic screening on additional sectors, including the repaired sector where the interruption happened, without event.

Mountain Valley is the only big gas pipeline under building and construction in the U.S. Northeast. It has experienced various regulative and court fights that have actually quit working a number of times considering that building and construction started in 2018.

The pipe, which is key to opening gas supplies from Appalachia, the country's biggest shale gas-producing area, needed an expense from the U.S. Congress that was signed into law by the president and assistance from the Supreme Court before it could reboot construction.

Ecologists have actually stated that the project would damage soil and water quality in the forest, increase making use of natural gas, a leading nonrenewable fuel source and greenhouse gas emitter, and stymie efforts to deal with climate change hazards.

When Mountain Valley started building and construction in February 2018, Equitrans approximated the 2.0-billion cubic feet daily task would cost about $3.5 billion and go into service by late 2018.

The 303-mile (488-kilometre) Mountain Valley task is owned by systems of Equitrans, the lead partner building the pipe with an approximately 49% interest, NextEra Energy, Consolidated Edison, AltaGas and RGC Resources . Equitrans will run the pipeline.

(source: Reuters)