Patrick Washington

  • commented on Driftwood Pipeline 2024-01-09 13:38:02 -0600
    My name is Patrick Washington and I would like to be a welders helper. My contact number is 318-499-2023 and I also attached my email. I’m a dedicated worker and have experience in working production, forklift, and laborer. Thank you.

    Driftwood Pipeline

    About the project

    Driftwood proposes to construct and operate dual 42-inch-diameter natural gas pipelines, referred to as the Line 200 and Line 300 project, originating near Ragley in Beauregard Parish, Louisiana southward to a proposed receiver facility near Carlyss in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. Additional facilities include one new compressor station, eleven meter stations, six mainline valves, and other aboveground facilities. The project would provide a maximum seasonal capacity of 5.7 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day to the Lake Charles market. 

    FERC is accepting public comments on the project's draft Environmental Impact Statement through July 5, 2022.

    Click here to view the project website.

  • commented on Northern Access 2024-01-09 13:37:48 -0600
    My name is Patrick Washington and I would like to be a welders helper. My contact number is 318-499-2023 and I also attached my email. I’m a dedicated worker and have experience in working production, forklift, and laborer. Thank you.

    Northern Access

    About the project

    As the fourth largest natural gas consuming state in the country, New York runs on natural gas. Integral to the New York state economy, the use of natural gas and the pipeline infrastructure that delivers gas from neighboring states not only provides clean, homegrown, abundant, reliable and affordable energy, but also provides good-paying jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for communities nationwide.

    The Northern Access pipeline will provide an outlet for natural gas production in north-central Pennsylvania, connecting it to the interstate pipeline system. That system connects to markets in the northeastern U.S. and mid-Atlantic regions as well as eastern Canada. The new sections of pipeline will interconnect specifically with the existing Trans Canada and Tennessee Gas Pipeline systems.

    The project awaits a clean water certification from the New York State DEC before construction can begin.

    Click here to view the project website.

  • commented on Mountain Valley 2024-01-09 13:36:39 -0600
    My name is Patrick Washington and I would like to be a welders helper. My contact number is 318-499-2023 and I also attached my email. I’m a dedicated worker and have experience in working production, forklift, and laborer. Thank you.

    Mountain Valley

    About the project

    MVP received federal approval in June 2023. The U.S. Supreme Court ordered in August for construction on MVP to resume, granting a request to lift lower court orders that had halted the project and (again) delayed its completion.

    In April 2022, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission amended Mountain Valley Pipeline's 2017 Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity, supporting project completion under water bodies with specific construction methods. MVP, which is already 94% complete, still needs authorization from other agencies for work in remaining streams and wetlands.

    With a vast supply of natural gas from Marcellus and Utica shale production, MVP is expected to provide up to two million dekatherms per day of firm transmission capacity to markets in the Mid- and South Atlantic regions of the U.S.

    You can learn more about MVP on its project website.