The Atlantic Coast Pipeline project was a private development by the
joint venture of Atlantic Coast Pipeline, LLC of several energy companies to bring
natural gas from wells in West Virginia, through Virginia, and then to a terminus in North Carolina and then onto other parts of the U.S. eastern seaboard, with a significant portion of this to be exported to India and Japan. Planning for the pipeline had started in 2013, and has become a high-value project under the
Trump administration. The project drew a great deal of opposition from residents in the affected areas, businesses, and environmentalists. Legal actions to block permits and alter the project's plans raised the cost projects from to by 2020, and delayed the plan to break ground on the pipeline in late 2017. A key
right of way permit for the pipeline was for crossing the
George Washington National Forest, which covers the
Appalachian Mountains along the border of West Virginia and Virginia. The George Washington National Forest was established as a national forest and part of the United States' public lands in 1918, and entrusted to the
United States Forest Service (USFS). Via the
Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 and subsequent amendments, agencies like the USFS may issue
special use right of way permits for public lands under their authority. The USFS became involved early in the planning process of the pipeline around April 2015, commenting on early
Environmental Impact Statements (EIS) from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for the project. The USFS had asserted that the EIS needed to evaluate alternate plans that would not use the national forest, as their policy was to only issued special-use permits on forest lands for cases which "cannot reasonably be accommodated on non-National Forest System lands". Though subsequent draft EIS included two of ten promised alternative routes, the USFS stated they could not assess these until the full evaluation was completed. However, by 2017 with the developer's original deadlines nearing, the USFS told the developers and FERC that they were satisfied with having the two alternatives to allow FERC to issue its final EIS by July 2017, and subsequently, granted the special use permits to the pipeline by January 2018. The permits allowed for about of pipeline to pass under the
Appalachian Trail. A collation of environmental groups, led by the Cowpasture River Preservation Association and including the
Sierra Club, the Southern Environmental Law Center, the Shenandoah Valley Network and the Virginia Wilderness Committee, filed suit against the USFS' action in the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in February 2018. The collation argued that the USFS's decision violated its authority under the Mineral Leasing Act and the
National Forest Management Act of 1976, and acted "arbitrarily and capriciously" under the
National Environmental Policy Act and
Administrative Procedure Act. The Fourth Circuit ruled on December 13, 2018 against the USFS and vacated the special use permit. The three-judge court unanimously agreed that the USFS's decision to grant the permit "is particularly informed by the Forest Service's serious environmental concerns that were suddenly, and mysteriously, assuaged in time to meet a private pipeline company's deadlines". The court further ruled that the USFS did not have the authority over the land use of the Appalachian Trail, which by the
National Trails System Act of 1968 had been designed as a National Park by the
United States Department of the Interior under authority of the
National Park Service (NPS), and which the amendments to the Mineral Leasing Act by the
Trans-Alaska Pipeline Authorization Act, were exempted from being granted for use for right-of-way permits under . The court also ruled on two other points, asserting that the USFS permit failed to account for mandatory environmental regulations to protect the land and ecology, and that the permitting did not perform enough evaluation of the risk related to landslides and erosion due to the steep lands in the area. The decision of the court was noted to end with a quote from
The Lorax: "We trust the United States Forest Service to 'speak for the trees, for the trees have no tongues.'" ==Supreme Court==