Current:Home > StocksStanding Rock Asks Court to Shut Down Dakota Access Pipeline as Company Plans to Double Capacity-LoTradeCoin
Standing Rock Asks Court to Shut Down Dakota Access Pipeline as Company Plans to Double Capacity
View Date:2024-12-23 22:19:15
The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe is asking a judge to throw out a federal permit for the Dakota Access oil pipeline, arguing that the government shut the tribe out of a court-ordered second environmental review and ignored its concerns.
The challenge comes as Energy Transfer, the company behind the pipeline, is now seeking to double how much oil the pipeline can carry. The Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL) passes under the Missouri River, the tribe’s water supply, just upstream from the Standing Rock Reservation.
The Army Corps of Engineers “never engaged with the Tribe or its technical experts, shared critical information, or responded to the Tribe’s concerns,” the tribe writes in a legal motion filed Friday in federal court. “The result is an irretrievably flawed decision, developed through a process that fell far short of legal standards. With DAPL’s proposal to double the flow of the pipeline, the unexamined risks to the Tribe continue to grow.”
The motion is the latest volley in a lawsuit first filed by the tribe against the Corps over its permitting of the controversial pipeline in 2016. Standing Rock won a partial victory in 2017 when a federal court determined that the Corps’ initial environmental review for the Dakota Access pipeline did not adequately address the impact a potential spill would have on the tribe.
The judge ordered the Corps to go back and do a thorough environmental assessment, saying “the Court expects the Corps not to treat remand as an exercise in filling out the proper paperwork.” The Corps completed the remand process in August 2018, saying that it did not find “significant new circumstance[s] or information relevant to environmental concerns.”
The tribe is now arguing that this subsequent assessment also failed to address its concerns.
“The remand was insincere,” Mike Faith, Jr., chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, said in a written statement. “The Corps ignored the Tribe’s concerns and worked with DAPL to justify a foregone decision. This illegal and dangerous pipeline must be shut down.”
Energy Transfer Now Plans to Double Capacity
The pipeline’s construction spurred months of protests and hundreds of arrests over its location just upstream of the Standing Rock Reservation.
The 1,172-mile pipeline from North Dakota to Illinois has had at least 10 spills totaling hundreds of gallons of crude oil since it began operations in June 2017, according to federal data analyzed by the Pipeline Safety Trust.
This latest in a years-long legal challenge by the tribe comes less than two months after Dakota Access LLC, a subsidiary of Energy Transfer, notified North Dakota’s Public Service Commission that it seeks to double the amount of crude oil it can ship through the Dakota Access pipeline to 1.1 million barrels per day.
The company’s June 20 request to “optimize” its pipeline considered local impacts of building a new pumping station such as erosion and dust control during construction of the facility. It did not, however, consider the impacts of a potential spill from a pipeline shipping twice the volume of oil compared to its original permit.
“This expansion is incredibly reckless,” Jan Hasselman of Earthjustice, an attorney representing the Standing Rock tribe, said. “You don’t put double the amount of material in the same space and expect nothing to change in terms of the risks, in terms of the consequences of a spill. It’s a different project, and before anyone approves something like this, there has to be another careful analysis of whether it’s safe.”
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was notified of the plan to double the pipeline’s capacity on June 12, according to the company’s letter to the state utility commission. Neither Energy Transfer nor the Army Corps responded to a request from InsideClimate News as to whether the company was seeking new permits from the Army Corps to double the pipeline’s capacity.
“My expectation is they will try to do this without them, because if they go and ask for new permits, that is a new environmental analysis,” Hasselman said. “It’s a big hang up.”
Tribe ‘Lives with the Risk of an Oil Spill’
The tribe, whose drinking water supply would be jeopardized if a spill were to occur where the pipeline crosses the Missouri River, urged the state utility commission to hold a hearing on the proposed pipeline capacity expansion.
“The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe lives with the risk of an oil spill today—a risk that has never been properly evaluated by any state or federal agency,” Faith wrote in a July 29 letter to the Public Service Commission. “We feel that this risk jeopardizes our way of life on the Standing Rock Reservation—a risk that is increased by the ETP application. We are North Dakotans too, and our concerns deserve to be heard.”
An attorney for Dakota Access LLC wrote to the commission, saying “the purported concerns raised by Standing Rock’s request are not within the jurisdiction of the Commission.” “These concerns are already addressed by federal law, and Dakota Access is in compliance with those requirements,” the letter stated.
Some of the Democrats running for president have also started speaking out about the pipeline.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren said on Friday that if elected president she would revoke the “improperly granted permits” for the Dakota Access pipeline and the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry crude oil from Canada to the United States. Candidates Jay Inslee, Bernie Sanders, Tom Steyer and Julián Castro have made a similar pledge organized by the group Bold Nebraska.
Published Aug. 20, 2019
veryGood! (851)
Related
- Why Outer Banks Fans Think Costars Rudy Pankow and Madison Bailey Used Stunt Doubles Amid Rumored Rift
- Juanita 'Lightnin' Epton, NASCAR and Daytona fixture for over six decades, dies at 103
- Bridge between Galveston and Pelican Island remains closed after barge crash
- Promoter for the Mike Tyson-Jake Paul fight in Texas first proposed as an exhibition
- Everard Burke Introduce
- Panthers are only NFL team with no prime-time games on 2024 schedule
- Why Sarah Paulson Says Not Living With Holland Taylor Is the Secret to Their Romance
- Arrests of US tourists in Turks and Caicos for carrying ammunition prompts plea from three governors
- Judge hears case over Montana rule blocking trans residents from changing sex on birth certificate
- 'One Chip Challenge' led to the death of teen Harris Wolobah, state official says
Ranking
- Judge sets April trial date for Sarah Palin’s libel claim against The New York Times
- Three soccer players arrested over alleged match-fixing involving yellow cards in Australian league
- Driver killed after tank depressurizes at Phoenix semiconductor facility that’s under construction
- A timeline of territorial shifts in Ukraine war
- College Football Fix podcast addresses curious CFP rankings and previews Week 12
- 2024 PGA Championship highlights: Xander Schauffele leads with 62
- 2024 NFL schedule release winners, losers: Who got help, and who didn't?
- Netanyahu fends off criticism at home and abroad over his lack of a postwar plan for Gaza
Recommendation
-
As CFP rankings punish SEC teams, do we smell bias against this proud and mighty league?
-
2024 ACM Awards Winners: See the Complete List
-
Watchdog: EPA’s lead pipe fix sent about $3 billion to states based on unverified data
-
Shop These Rare Deals on Shay Mitchell's BÉIS Before They Sell Out
-
Hurricane forecasters on alert: November storm could head for Florida
-
Rock band Cage the Elephant emerge from loss and hospitalization with new album ‘Neon Pill’
-
Angie Harmon Suing Instacart After Deliveryman Shot and Killed Her Dog
-
Drones smuggled drugs across Niagara River from Canada, 3 suspects caught in NY