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Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. Receives Expected Nasdaq Delisting Determination

  • NEW YORK, NY / ACCESSWIRE / February 14, 2024 / Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. (NASDAQ:ACAH) (the "Company"), a special purpose acquisition company, announced today that on February 14, 2024, the Company received a Staff Delisting Determination (the "Staff Determination") from the Listing Qualifications Department of The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC ("Nasdaq") notifying the Company that for the reasons discussed below trading of the Company's common stock will be suspended from The Nasdaq Capital Market at the opening of business on February 23, 2024, and a Form 25-NSE will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"), which will remove the Company's securities from listing and registration on The Nasdaq Stock Market. On August 17, 2023, and November 20, 2023, Staff notified the Company that it did not comply with Nasdaq's filing requirements set forth in Listing Rule 5250(c)(1) (the "Rule") because it had not filed its Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2023, and its Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2023 (the "Delinquent Reports").
    02/14/2024

IMPORTANT: Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. Files Definitive Proxy Statement in Connection with Plan to Extend the Amount of Time the Company has to Consummate a Business Combination

  • NEW YORK , Sept. 6, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. (NASDAQ: ACAH) (the "Company"), a special purpose acquisition corporation, today announced that it filed a Schedule 14A Definitive Proxy Statement on September 6, 2023 (the "Definitive Proxy Statement") in connection with a special meeting (the "Special Meeting") to extend the amount of time the Company has to consummate a business combination (the "Extension").
    09/06/2023
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Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. Announces Plans to Extend Deadline to Complete Initial Business Combination.

  • The Company Also Received a Notice of Non-compliance from Nasdaq for Failure to Timely File its Second Quarter 2023 Form 10-Q NEW YORK , Aug. 25, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. (NASDAQ: ACAH) (the "Company"), a special purpose acquisition corporation, today announced that its Board of Directors approved to extend the date by which the Company would be required to consummate a business combination ("Extension"). This announcement follows a prior announcement on August 18, 2023 whereby the Company announced it would redeem its public shares.
    Fri, Aug. 25, 2023

Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. Will Redeem Its Public Shares and Will Not Consummate an Initial Business Combination

  • NEW YORK , Aug. 18, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. (NASDAQ: ACAH) (the "Company"), a special purpose acquisition corporation, today announced that it will redeem all of its outstanding shares of Class A common stock (the "public shares"), effective as of August 18, 2023, because the Company will not consummate an initial business combination within the time period required by its Second Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation (the "Certificate of Incorporation"). As stated in the Company's Certificate of Incorporation, if the Company is unable to complete an initial business combination by June 8, 2023 (subject to certain inapplicable exceptions), the Company will: cease all operations except for the purpose of winding up, as promptly as reasonably possible but not more than ten business days thereafter subject to lawfully available funds therefor, redeem 100% of the public shares in consideration of a per share price, payable in cash, equal to the quotient obtained by dividing (A) the aggregate amount then on deposit in the trust account less up to $100,000 of such net interest to pay dissolution expenses), including interest, if any, not previously released to the Company to pay taxes, by (B) the total number of then outstanding public shares, which redemption will completely extinguish rights of the holders of the public shares (including the right to receive further liquidating distributions, if any), subject to applicable law, and as promptly as reasonably possible following such redemption, subject to the approval of the remaining stockholders and the board of directors of the Company in accordance with applicable law, dissolve and liquidate, subject in each case to the Company's obligations under the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, as amended from time to time, to provide for claims of creditors and other requirements of applicable law.
    Fri, Aug. 18, 2023

Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. Announces Second Monthly Extension of Business Combination Period and Additional Contribution to Trust Account

  • NEW YORK , July 7, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Corp. (NASDAQ: ACAH) (the "Company"), a special purpose acquisition corporation, announced that Atlantic Coastal Acquisition Management LLC, the Company's initial public offering sponsor (the "Sponsor"), has deposited $80,000 into the Company's trust account (the "Trust Account) in order to extend the period of time that the Company has to complete a business combination for an additional one (1) month period, from July 8, 2023 to August 8, 2023. The Company had previously extended the period of time it had to complete a business combination from June 8, 2023 to July 8, 2023.
    Fri, Jul. 07, 2023

Duke takes $1.6 bln charge to exit Atlantic Coast natgas pipe

  • U.S. energy company Duke Energy Corp said Monday it took a $1.6-billion after-tax charge in the second quarter for the cancellation of the Atlantic Coast natural gas pipeline from West Virginia to North Carolina. Atlantic Coast was the most expensive U.S. gas pipeline under construction when Duke and partner Dominion Energy Inc exited the $8-billion project in July due to regulatory uncertainty following years of delays and billions of dollars of cost overruns.
    Mon, Aug. 10, 2020

Grim Day for Pipelines Shows They’re Almost Impossible to Build

  • (Bloomberg) -- To be an energy superpower, U.S. oil and natural gas requires a suitably gargantuan pipeline network that stretches for millions of miles. The country’s ability to expand that infrastructure is being tested like never before.In the span of less than 24 hours, a court ordered the Dakota Access crude oil pipeline to shut down and the developers of the Atlantic Coast gas conduit said they were canceling the project. It was a deluge of bad news for an industry that’s increasingly finding that the mega-projects of the past are no longer feasible in the face of unprecedented opposition to fossil fuels and the infrastructure that supports them.Armed with experienced lawyers and record funding, environmental groups are finding enormous success blocking key pipeline permits in court. The challenges come despite support from President Donald Trump, who so far has failed to ensure big projects like Keystone XL get built.“I would expect this to be a turning point for new investment,” said Katie Bays, co-founder of Washington-based Sandhill Strategy LLC. “There is real investor fatigue around this parade of legal and regulatory headwinds to energy projects.”Dominion Energy Inc. and its partner Duke Energy Corp. said Sunday they’ll no longer pursue their $8 billion Atlantic Coast natural gas pipeline after years of delays and ballooning costs, becoming the third such project this year to be sidelined or canceled altogether amid mounting opposition to development of oil and gas.Then on Monday, a U.S. district court ordered Energy Transfer LP’s Dakota Access crude oil pipeline to shut down by Aug. 5. It ruled that a crucial federal permit for the project fell too far short of National Environmental Policy Act requirements to allow the pipeline to continue operating while regulators conduct a broader analysis ordered in a previous decision.The keep-it-in-the-ground movement has increasingly turned its attention to the pipes, rather than the wells themselves, because they require various federal and state permits, which, for the most part, can be more easily litigated.Trump has attempted to insulate the industry from those efforts. In his first week in office, he paved the way for Dakota Access and the contentious Keystone XL oil pipeline. Last year, the White House signed an executive order aimed at short-circuiting regulators who held up gas lines by refusing permits.Dakota Access entered service but remained embattled. Keystone XL still hasn’t been built. In February, Williams Cos. scrapped its Constitution natural gas pipeline after failing repeatedly to gain a water permit from New York.Also See: Keystone XL Pipeline Stays Blocked in U.S. Supreme Court OrderIn contrast to Trump, presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has vowed to kill Keystone XL and is supporting a push to lower-carbon energy sources, even if it comes at the expense of oil and gas jobs.“The Dakota Access and Atlantic Coast pipes encapsulate the last few years of a trend we’ve watched: the dramatic expansion of using regulatory obligations to hurt infrastructure projects in the courts,” said Brandon Barnes, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.When Atlantic Coast was proposed in 2014, it was expected to cost $5 billion and connect Appalachian shale gas plays with markets in the southeast. The price tag rose to $8 billion as the pipeline’s date to enter service was pushed back over and over again.In the end, not only did Dominion cancel it, the company also announced Sunday the sale of almost all its gas pipeline and storage business to Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. for $4 billion, while highlighting its target of net zero carbon emissions by 2050.Environmental groups heralded the Atlantic Coast cancellation and the court’s decision to shut down Dakota Access, while industry groups blamed these latest blows on litigious activists.“The well-funded, obstructionist environmental lobby has successfully killed the Atlantic Coast Pipeline,” U.S. Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette said in a statement.The American Petroleum Institute said in a statement that it’s “deeply troubled” by the Atlantic Coast cancellation and Dakota Access shutdown. “The need to reform our broken permitting system has never been more urgent,” the industry group said.Oil producers Continental Resources Inc. and Hess Corp., both of which have significant operations in the Bakken shale field of North Dakota, saw their shares fall Monday morning following the Dakota Access shutdown order. And a lack of new pipelines in the U.S. Northeast, which faces gas supply constraints, may hobble Appalachian producers and potentially hasten the pace of transition to renewable energy.The demise of Atlantic Coast also casts a dark cloud on Mountain Valley Pipeline, a $4.7 billion gas project being developed by EQM Midstream Partners LP alongside utility giants NextEra Corp., Consolidated Edison Inc. and others. Enbridge Inc.’s Line 3 and Line 5 crude pipelines remain ensnared in court battles and regulatory pushback.The Dakota Access ruling marks the first time a court has shut down a major, in-service pipeline for environmental concerns, Southern Methodist University energy law professor James W. Coleman said. The decision upends conventional wisdom that judges would always preserve the status quo by keeping projects in service, and will spur pipeline opponents to look for opportunities to shut down other existing projects, he said.Even in Texas, long considered a safe haven for the oil and gas industry, Kinder Morgan Inc.’s Permian Highway Pipeline is experiencing a backlash from landowners and conservationists who argue the project would harm aquifer recharge zones.“We have to be honest with ourselves that a world where ACP is too risky to get done is probably also a world where KXL is too risky to get done,” said Bays, using acronyms for Atlantic Coast and Keystone XL. “We’ll see companies pivot toward smaller, strategic investments and away from large interstate oil and gas pipelines.”For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.
    Mon, Jul. 06, 2020
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