The Mountain Valley Pipeline is a 42-inch, 303-mile underground natural gas pipeline under construction in the United States from southern Virginia to northwestern West Virginia. The completed pipeline would have a capacity of 2 million dekatherms (Dts) of
natural gas per day. Most of that gas would originate from the
Marcellus and
Utica shale formations. This would make the pipeline full of highly explosive natural gas and under, approximately, 1.440 pounds per square inch of pressure.
Concerns Opponents of the MVP have expressed safety concerns related to pipeline explosions, objection to seizures of private land through
eminent domain, and concerns about the project’s contribution to
climate change. They have also expressed concerns about
erosion from disturbance on steep slopes causing water pollution, and damage to scenery around the
Appalachian Trail.
Opposition to the pipeline The Yellow Finch tree sit was one of several blockades against the MVP as part of an ongoing resistance to the pipeline that began in 2018. This resistance is organized by a non-hierarchical group of autonomous individuals called Appalachians Against Pipelines. Individuals in this group often use pseudonyms to maintain anonymity. Some local residents have supported the campaign and been arrested for participating in blockades. and several incidents where individuals have chained themselves to
construction equipment or otherwise blocked access to construction sites. A
Facebook group for Appalachians Against Pipelines had over 19,000 followers in September 2021 when MVP subpoenaed Facebook in an attempt to acquire the names and telephone numbers of the people who manage the page. Activists associated with Appalachians Against Pipelines have made statements connecting their campaign against the pipeline to the
prison abolition movement. == Description of the Yellow Finch blockade ==