Not Just North Dakota: Here Are 10 More States Where Activists Are Fighting Pipeline Projects

by 12/18/2016

With the Dakota Access Pipeline nearly 90% complete, developers are focusing their attention elsewhere. Meanwhile, protests against additional pipelines throughout the country have yet to receive a tenth of the airtime.

“If you draw a line from Chicago to the Gulf Coast — Houston, Port Arthur, Baton Rouge — that line goes through Patoka, Illinois,” John Moody, a spokesman for the Association of Oil Pipelines told the Chicago Sun Times [3]. “Then start in Cushing, Oklahoma, and draw a line across to Cleveland and Detroit and central Ohio, and that line goes through Patoka. Patoka is a crossroads for energy delivery.”

Beyond North Dakota, here are 10 states that have also been battling pipeline projects.
1. Ohio

Construction of the 255-mile [4] Nexus Gas Transmission project, a partnership between Houston-based Spectra Energy and Detroit’s DTE Energy, is expected to begin by early 2017.

2. Iowa

The Dakota Access Pipeline project faced resistance in Iowa long before it reached Standing Rock. In July 2015, landowners in its path urged the Iowa Utilities Board to reject permits needed for the project to proceed.

“Our century-plus-old farm was taken care of for four generations and I will do my best to keep it that way,” they wrote [5] in their objection. But the anti-pipeline group Bold Iowa has pledged [6] to keep fighting the four-state, 1,172-mile crude oil pipeline until it becomes operational. The group’s direct action includes standing in court with Iowa landowners [7] i [7]n the path of the Dakota Access Pipeline battling eminent domain abuse.

3. Texas

Standing Rock’s success this December reinvigorated a more than two-year battle [8] to half construction of the Trans-Pecos pipeline, a 148-mile joint venture [9] with Mexico’s federal electricity commission, the Comisión Federal de Electricidad.

4. Louisiana

The company behind the Dakota Access Pipeline is currently planning a 162-mile pipeline [10] that would cut through the Atchafalaya Basin and 11 Louisiana parishes. But resistance to the Bayou Bridge Pipeline has already spread worldwide. Concerned citizens and environmental groups from New Zealand to South Africa have gathered thousands of signatures, leading the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to call for a public hearing in which the water quality permits of the site will be assessed.

5. Florida

The Sierra Club, Chattahoochee Riverkeeper and Flint Riverkeepers filed a motion [11] in late October to expedite review of the Southeast Market Pipelines Project, which includes the $3.2 billion Sabal Trail gas pipeline. Protests have continued for the past month and 16 demonstrators [12] have been arrested thus far.

6. Alabama

On November 15, outside the Army Corps of Engineers building, Huntsville protesters gathered [13] in solidarity with the thousands at Standing Rock. The Sabal Trail pipeline is set to cross three states and cover 500-plus miles (86 in Alabama, 162 in Georgia, 268 in Florida).

7. Arkansas

Diamond Pipeline is a planned 440-mile oil pipeline [14] by Plains All American Pipeline and Valero Energy Corp across 14 counties and five rivers in Arkansas. The project is set to begin by the end of 2016.

8. North Carolina

A nearly 600-mile proposed pipeline drew protests in three cities on November 19. In Pembroke, Fayetteville and Nashville, hundreds marched in opposition to the Atlantic Coast Pipeline [15] which awaits a review by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Dominion Power and Duke Energy’s $5 billion project would carry natural gas to North Carolina from fracking operations in West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

9. Pennsylvania

Sunoco Logistics pushed back the timeline [16] for its Mariner East 2 natural gas liquids pipeline on November 12. The $2.5 billion project has not yet received the necessary approvals, even months after charging Huntingdon County residents who objected [17] to the pipeline being built on their property.

10. New York

The National Fuel Gas Supply Corp. awaits approval [18] from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to begin its proposed $410 million Northern Access Project in Western New York. Meanwhile, 50 miles outside of NYC, Spectra Energy’s pipeline expansion project continues to face controversy [19].

Alexandra Rosenmann is an AlterNet associate editor. Follow her @alexpreditor [20].

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