Dakota Access pipeline protests planned
across United States
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[November 15, 2016]
By Liz Hampton
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Demonstrators across
U.S. cities will gather outside offices of the Army Corps of Engineers,
banks and energy companies on Tuesday in the largest protest against the
Dakota Access Pipeline since the U.S. government halted the project in
September.
More than 200 protests are set to take place in a "Day of Action" called
for by indigenous leaders in support of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe
and in an effort to urge the Army Corps of Engineers and U.S. government
to stop the pipeline, according to Dallas Goldtooth, a spokesman for
Indigenous Environmental Network, one of the organizers.
The $3.7 billion Dakota Access project has drawn steady opposition since
last summer from the tribe, along with environmental activists, who
claim it could pollute nearby water supplies and destroy sacred
historical sites.
"The purpose is to elevate the issue and to encourage the Army Corps to
exert its power to stop this pipeline," Goldtooth said of Tuesday's
protests in which more than 30 groups, including Greenpeace and CREDO
Action, are participating.
The Army Corps and Department of Interior on Monday delayed a decision
on whether to grant an easement to Energy Transfer Partners, the main
company behind the pipeline, for an easement to tunnel under Lake Oahe,
the water source that is the focus of protests.
Construction of the 1,172-mile (1,885-km) pipeline is about 85 percent
complete, Phillips 66, one of the pipeline's investors, said last week.
The only outstanding construction work to be done in North Dakota is the
segment of the line that would run under the lake, Energy Transfer said
last week.
Energy Transfer has said the pipeline would be a more efficient and
safer way to transport oil from the Bakken shale of North Dakota to the
Midwest and onto the U.S. Gulf Coast. The company last week said it was
confident the Army Corps would grant the easement, allowing it to begin
drilling under the lake about two weeks later.
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People march past the North Dakota State Capitol building during a
protest in Bismarck against plans to pass the Dakota Access pipeline
under Lake Oahe and near the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, North
Dakota, U.S. November 14, 2016. REUTERS/Stephanie Keith
Tuesday's protests will be focused outside Army Corps offices
throughout the country, and at major banks financing construction of
the pipeline. Norwegian bank DNB this month said it would reconsider
financing the project if the concerns of the Standing Rock Sioux
were not addressed. In Houston, Texas, demonstrators will gather
outside Energy Transfer Partners' office.
Although the protests were planned in advance of the November
presidential election, they come as groups opposed to the Dakota
Access line could face headwinds following the election of
Republican Donald Trump.
While the president-elect has not weighed in on the Dakota Access
specifically, he has expressed strong support for development of
energy infrastructure projects, including oil pipelines.
Kelcy Warren, the top executive at Energy Transfer, donated more
than $100,000 to the Trump campaign.
(Reporting by Liz Hampton; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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