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Construction Begins On Sunbury Pipeline

Jeff Brady
/
NPR

 

State and local officials attended a ceremony Wednesday morning to celebrate the groundbreaking for a 20-inch pipeline that will deliver Marcellus Shale gas to a new power plant in central Pennsylvania.

The Sunbury Pipeline is being built by UGI Energy Services. It will begin in Lycoming County and travel 35 milesto feed into the Hummel Station power plant, which is under construction at the site of the former Sunbury coal plant in Shamokin Dam, Synder County.

Credit Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

Construction on the pipeline is expected to be completed by the end of this year. The plant is projected to come online in early 2018 and power approximately 1 million homes. The project is part of a broader, ongoing national trend away from coal, as natural gas takes up an increasing share of electric power generation.

“The Sunbury Pipeline Project represents an incremental step forward for Pennsylvania natural gas infrastructure, and a major step forward for Pennsylvania’s energy future,” UGI Energy Services President Brad Hall Hall said in a news release. “UGI is excited to continue its more than century-long tradition of putting natural gas to work for Pennsylvania by fueling the state-of-the-art Hummel Station along with enhancing local natural gas supplies.”

Panda Power Funds, a Texas company, is constructing the Hummel Station plant, as well as two other natural gas-fired power plants in Bradford and Lycoming counties.

WMHT/Capital Region reporter for the Innovation Trail.