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![]() by Staff Writers New York (AFP) July 5, 2020
Duke Energy and Dominion Energy announced Sunday they had dropped plans to build a controversial natural gas pipeline through mountains in the eastern United States. Dominion Energy also announced it intends to sell its natural gas transmission and storage assets to American businessman Warren Buffet's holding company for $9.7 billion. Duke Energy and Dominion Energy announced in 2014 plans to build the Atlantic Coast Pipeline that was intended to provide natural gas supplies to growing markets in Virginia and North Carolina. But "ongoing delays and increasing cost uncertainty... threaten the economic viability of the project," the two companies said in a joint statement. The pipeline, which would have crossed the Appalachian Mountain range, had attracted criticism and lawsuits from environmental protection organizations. But the US Supreme Court had ruled in favor of the energy titans in June. However, another ongoing lawsuit has contributed, among other factors, to "make the project too uncertain to justify investing more shareholder capital," the companies said in the statement. Due to the legal issues, the project's anticipated cost as increased from $4.5 or $5 billion to $8 billion, they said. Furthermore, if the pipeline were completed, it was expected to be operational in early 2022, three and a half years later than originally projected. The decision to halt construction "reflects the increasing legal uncertainty that overhangs large-scale energy and industrial infrastructure development in the United States," the chief executives of both Duke and Dominion Energy said in the statement. In addition to dropping the project, Dominion Energy intends to sell 7,700 miles (12,400 kilometers) of pipeline as well as 25.5 billion cubic meters of natural gas storage space to Buffett's holding company, Berkshire Hathaway. The deal also includes the transfer of 25 percent of the Cove Point terminal in Maryland, on the US East Coast, from where natural gas is exported abroad. Berkshire Hathaway, which already manages more than $100 billion in assets in the energy sector, will pay Dominion Energy $4 billion in cash and take over $5.7 billion in debt. This is the first major acquisition for Buffett's holding company -- known for its equity investments in large companies at difficult times -- since the start of the coronavirus pandemic and the ensuing economic crisis. jum/glr/to/mdl
![]() ![]() Iraq oil exports sink to comply with OPEC cuts Baghdad (AFP) July 1, 2020 Iraq's oil exports sank further in June as it tries to abide by OPEC production cuts, its oil ministry said Wednesday, but revenues crept up thanks to recovering crude prices. The OPEC cartel's second-biggest crude producer had been left reeling by the recent worldwide crash in oil prices and a flood of cheap crude from Saudi Arabia. To help boost prices, Iraq agreed to join an output cut deal between OPEC and its allies and dropped its exports in June to 84 million barrels, its lowest monthly s ... read more
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