SOUTHGATE COMMENT PERIOD OPEN UNTIL MAY 30 - VISIT THE TOOLKIT & SUBMIT TODAY!

NO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSION

NO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSIONNO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSIONNO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSION

NO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSION

NO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSIONNO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSIONNO MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE SOUTHGATE EXTENSION
  • Home
  • OVERVIEW & UPDATES

MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE/SOUTHGATE EXTENSION 101

IN-PERSON SCOPING SESSIONS ANNOUNCED FOR CHATHAM, VA & ROCKINGHAM, NC — JUNE 16 & 17

Attend an in-person scoping session hosted by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), where the agency will collect public comments regarding environmental concerns related to the proposed MVP Southgate.  


Chatham, VA: Scoping Session - Public Input Opportunity 

Monday June 16th from 5pm-8pm

Olde Dominion Agricultural Complex 

19783 U.S. Highway 29 Chatham, VA 24531


Rockingham, NC: Scoping Session - Public Input Opportunity 

Tuesday June 17th from 5pm-8pm

Rockingham County Community College ADT Auditorium 

560 County Home Road Wentworth, NC 27375

VIEW PUBLIC NOTICE

SUBMIT YOUR COMMENT TO THE U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS BY MAY 30!

Public comments are vital and used in the preparation of an Environmental Assessment (EA) and/or an Environmental Impact Statement pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). They are also used to determine the need for a public hearing and to determine the overall public interest of the proposed activity. 


Head to the toolkit for talking points, a step-by-step guide & submit your comment to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers by May 30! 


On Thurs May 21 at 6:30pm, join advocates for a Virtual Comment Party to walk through the comment process together - we hope to see you there! RSVP

VIEW TOOLKIT

APRIL 30, 2025: ARMY CORPS RELEASES PUBLIC NOTICE ON SOUTHGATE 404 PERMIT

The US Army Corps of Engineers published the public notices for Mountain Valley Pipeline, LLC’s Clean Water Act permit for the stream and wetlands crossings for its proposed methane gas pipeline “Southgate.” The notices are for the Norfolk and Wilmington Districts of the Army Corps. Southgate would travel from the Mountain Valley Pipeline mainline terminus in Chatham, Virginia through Pittsylvania County, Virginia, and Rockingham, North Carolina.


According to the notices, “the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps)…has found that this permit request meets the terms of EO 14156 and is therefore subject to special emergency permitting procedures to address an energy supply situation which would result in an unacceptable hazard to life, a significant loss of property, or an immediate, unforeseen, and significant economic hardship if corrective action requiring a permit is not undertaken within a time period less than the normal time needed to process the application under standard procedures.”


The Southgate project would extend the controversial Mountain Valley Pipeline along a route similar to the proposed Southeast Supply Enhancement Project from Williams Companies’ expansion of their network of Transco pipelines. These projects are also currently undergoing a review process by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The co-location of two high-pressure, large diameter pipelines is of significant concern for local residents in the impacted counties. The application process for Southgate also includes review by the Virginia and North Carolina Departments of Environmental Quality. Their public comment periods are estimated to be in late Spring and early Summer.

APRIL 17, 2025: MVP DEVELOPER SUBMITS JOINT PERMIT APPLICATION FOR SOUTHGATE PIPELINE

The Virginia Marine Resources Commission posted Mountain Valley Pipeline, LLC’s Joint Permit Application for its proposed methane gas pipeline “Southgate.” The application notes that it has also been submitted to other federal and state agencies, including the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Wilmington and Norfolk Districts, and the Virginia and North Carolina Departments of Environmental Quality. As part of the review process, agencies will determine if the application’s content is complete, or missing necessary information.


The Southgate pipeline is proposed for Pittsylvania County, Virginia, and Rockingham, North Carolina, and is also currently undergoing an amendment review process by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The developers had recently altered their plans for Southgate, changing the route, length and pipe diameter. Southgate would extend the controversial Mountain Valley Pipeline, and has faced significant opposition since it was proposed in 2018.


The Southgate project has a route similar to the proposed Southeast Supply Enhancement Project from Williams Companies’ expansion of their network of Transco pipelines. The co-location of two high-pressure, large diameter pipelines is of significant concern for local residents in the impacted counties.

The application process for Southgate will include public notices from the Virginia and North Carolina Departments of Environmental Quality (DEQ), followed by public comment periods. Virginia DEQ’s calendar states that a draft permit is anticipated to be released around July, with a comment period in August.

MARCH 2025: MVP SOUTHGATE INTERVENOR DEADLINE IS MARCH 11

What is a Motion to Intervene?

Individuals have the option to intervene in Federal Energy Regulatory (FERC) Commission proceedings. As an intervenor, it can allow individuals to become participants in a proceeding and have the right to request rehearing of Commission orders and seek relief of final agency actions in the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeal. 


Check out the Intervenor Template and How-to Guide to file your Motion to Intervene by March 11 at 5pm

FEB 2025: MVP DEVELOPER SUBMITS REQUEST TO ALTER SOUTHGATE PIPELINE

Pipeline operator Mountain Valley Pipeline, LLC submitted a new amendment to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for the methane gas pipeline “Southgate,” proposed for Virginia and North Carolina. Southgate would extend the controversial Mountain Valley Pipeline, and has faced significant opposition since it was proposed in 2018.


MVP made an amendment request instead of a new application and asked that FERC issue an order by December 31, 2025. Project opponents contend a new application should be required because the route and impact of the project are distinct from the original 2020 Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity issued by FERC.


Just 10 days after receiving a three-year extension on their federal certificate, MVP announced it had radically altered its plans for Southgate, changing the route, length and pipe diameter. As described in the amendment, Southgate would include 31 miles of 30-inch diameter pipeline in Virginia and North Carolina and had “entered into precedent agreements with Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (‘Duke’) and Public Service Company of North Carolina, Inc, d/b/a Enbridge Gas North Carolina (‘PSNC’), both as Foundation Shippers.” 


The similarly routed proposed Southeast Supply Enhancement Project from Williams Companies’ expansion of the Transco pipelines also claims Duke will be a major customer. The co-location of two high-pressure, large diameter pipelines is of significant concern for local residents.

MVP’s amendment request will trigger a public comment period.


Check out these news stories:

Inside Climate News

Radio WVTF

JAN 2024: SOUTHGATE DEVELOPERS ANNOUNCE MAJOR CHANGES

Just before the close of 2023, Mountain Valley Pipeline Southgate Extension developers quietly announced major changes to their methane gas pipeline proposal, including cutting the total length in half and removing Alamance County from the route, increasing pipe diameter from 24 in to 30 in (wider pipes = more dangerous) and increasing capacity from 300,000 Dth per day to 550,000 Dth per day.


The new route would extend 31 miles from the terminus of the MVP mainline in Chatham, VA into Rockingham County, NC, and the pipe's diameter would be increased. According to developers, the revised plan would also mean fewer water crossings, and no additional compressor station, the permit for which MVP Southgate was denied on environmental justice grounds in 2021. The new plans are not yet finalized.


Co-Founder and Director of  7 Directions of Service, Dr. Crystal Cavalier-Keck, responded to the possible changes:


“As usual, MVP developers file before a holiday weekend to keep impacted communities in the dark and scrambling. Rightfully, these bad actors are afraid of our collective grassroots power and our growing movement of everyday people who stand together against MVP and MVP Southgate and all forms of new fossil fuel infrastructure to fight for life. Whether Southgate is proposed to be 1 mile, 31 miles, or 75 miles, we will only rest when this unnecessary and dangerous methane gas pipeline–as well as MVP mainline–are canceled, and meaningful steps are taken to phase out fossil fuels immediately.”

WHAT IS THE MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE (MVP)?

In 2018, construction on the 303-mile fracked-gas Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) began in Virginia and West Virginia. Construction has involved over 500 violations of permit conditions, laws, and regulations, and 75% of the route slices through landslide and earthquake-prone terrain, including sacred Indigenous burial sites, waterways, and the Jefferson National Forest. Frontline communities and Water Protectors have been fighting the harmful, unnecessary pipeline for nearly 10 years, and came extremely close to canceling it.


In June 2023, the MVP mainline was fast-tracked by Congress and the White House, a result of its corrupt inclusion in the nation’s must-pass debt ceiling legislation. The MVP provisions forced the approval of all remaining federal permits, and forbids judicial review of any permits. The provisions did not include fast-tracking the MVP Southgate Extension.

WHAT IS THE MVP SOUTHGATE EXTENSION?

The MVP Southgate Extension is a proposed 73-mile extension of the MVP mainline, from Pittsylvania County, VA into North Carolina’s Rockingham and Alamance Counties that poses a grave danger to working class and farming families, and the entire ecosystem of the Piedmont region. The project would also force a third polluting compressor station to be constructed in a predominantly Black community near Chatham, VA. 


The proposed route is highly residential, and  large public schools like  Alamance Community College are within one-half mile of where the pipe would be laid. In its crossing of 200 streams and tributaries throughout the Dan and Haw River Watersheds, the MVP Southgate Extension would destroy habitats and recreational sites, and pose ongoing threats to water quality for downstream users.

MVP SOUTHGATE RESISTANCE

Outraged by this unnecessary, greed-driven threat to our health, land and futures, everyday people have been pushing back against the pipeline by submitting comments, participating in hearings, writing to local newspapers and educating our neighbors.


In 2018, Alamance County Commissioners passed a resolution opposing Southgate that raised concerns about the pipeline’s impact on the county’s water quality. Later that year, officials in Stoneville, N.C., also passed a resolution in opposition to the pipeline, citing environmental concerns. 


Even the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality agrees that that MVP Southgate is an unneeded risk. In August 2020, the agency denied Southgate’s application for a Clean Water Act permit.


“This has always been an unnecessary project that poses unnecessary risks to our environment and given the uncertain future of the MVP Mainline, North Carolinians should not be exposed to the risk of another incomplete pipeline project,” said then-DEQ Secretary Micheal Regan in an August 2020 statement. “North Carolina’s clean energy future is not dependent on adding more natural gas infrastructure.”

MVP SOUTHGATE IS AN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE ISSUE

 In 2021, the Virginia Air Pollution Control Board voted to deny the air pollution permit for the Lambert Compressor Station, on the basis of environmental justice concerns. This outcome was a result of tireless grassroots organizing and community members’ advocacy. 


Lambert would have been the third compressor station in the majority Black Banister District , and would have increased air emissions of carbon monoxide, particulate matter 2.5, and formaldehyde — substances known to contribute to respiratory problems, heart disease and cancer.

MVP SOUTHGATE IS UNNCESSARY

A July 2019 Applied Economics Clinic report found that PSNC Energy, the Dominion Energy subsidiary that contracted to buy most of the gas that would flow through MVP Southgate, overestimated how much gas they will actually need in the future. 


An economic analysis from 2020 indicated that existing gas infrastructure was more than sufficient to meet regional energy demand. Since then, the domestic and regional demand for natural gas has fallen, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Stop the MVP Southgate Extension!

Copyright © 2025 StopMVPSouthgate - All Rights Reserved.

Powered by

This website uses cookies.

We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.

Accept
SIGN THE PETITION