SACE Fossil Gas Resource Hub

Shelley Robbins | February 14, 2025 |

The Southeastern states are facing an unprecedented fossil gas pipeline buildout as producers seek ways to move Marcellus and Utica shale gas from West Virginia and Pennsylvania toward speculative markets in the South.

SACE is working to track, analyze, and daylight these projects. In our work against fossil gas, we recognized the need for a hub to provide quick access to our own blogs, analyses, and resources, plus highlight some of the great resources developed by experts and partners. We hope you find this page useful as we work to transition the Southeast to clean, reliable, renewable energy.

What is Fossil Gas?

Fossil gas is another name for “natural gas” and “methane gas” — these are just different names for the same polluting, costly gas. (Read Call “Natural” Gas what it is: a Fossil Fuel for more.) In addition to emitting harmful local pollutants when it is burned, fossil gas is increasingly expensive, often unreliable, and ultimately locks us into carbon emissions that worsen the terrible, unjust impacts of climate change on our communities every day.


SACE Analysis

“Highway to Export” Fossil Gas Analysis

Pipeline Safety White Paper (Coming Soon)


General Resources

SACE Articles

Southeast

North Carolina

South Carolina

Tennessee


Community Resources

Maps

Mountain Valley Pipeline

Transco Pipeline

Other

Department of Energy Study – Energy, Economic, and Environmental Assessment of U.S. LNG Exports  


Journalism & Recent news

A Pipeline Runs Through It, by Lisa Sorg, Inside Climate News, Nov. 10, 2024. Past a prison and an elementary school, the T15 pipeline will traverse 45 miles of North Carolina countryside that Shelley Robbins wanted to see for herself. The T15 is planned as a critical connector in the state’s climate-warming fossil fuel buildout. Check out Lisa’s Gaslighting Series here

Community pushes back against natural gas pipeline expansion, by Beza Zelalem, The Old Gold and Black, Feb. 21, 2025. Safety, environmental and economic concerns over SSEP spark concern for locals and environmental groups, reported by the student paper of Wake Forest University.