Greenpeace says a pipeline company's lawsuit threatens the
organization's future
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[February 24, 2025]
By JACK DURA
MANDAN, N.D. (AP) — A Texas pipeline company's lawsuit accusing
Greenpeace of defamation, disruptions and attacks during protests
against the Dakota Access Pipeline goes to trial in North Dakota on
Monday, in a case the environmental advocacy organization says threatens
free speech rights and its very future.
The lawsuit stems from the protests in 2016 and 2017 over the oil
pipeline's planned Missouri River crossing, upstream from the Standing
Rock Sioux Tribe's reservation. The tribe has long argued that the
pipeline threatens its water supply. Of the thousands of people who
protested the project, hundreds were arrested.
Energy Transfer and its subsidiary Dakota Access allege trespass,
nuisance, defamation and other offenses by Netherlands-based Greenpeace
International and its American branch, Greenpeace USA. The lawsuit also
names the group's funding arm, Greenpeace Fund Inc.
The jury trial in state court in Mandan, North Dakota, is scheduled to
last five weeks.
What are details of the case?
Dallas-based Energy Transfer alleges Greenpeace tried to delay
construction of the pipeline, defamed the companies behind it, and
coordinated trespassing, vandalism and violence by pipeline protesters.
The lawsuit seeks millions of dollars in damages.

The Dakota Access Pipeline was completed and has been transporting oil
since June 2017.
Greenpeace International said it shouldn't be named in the lawsuit
because it is distinct from the two U.S.-based Greenpeace entities,
operates outside the U.S., and its employees were never in North Dakota
or involved with the protests.
Greenpeace USA said the plaintiffs have failed to back up their claims
in the years since the protests.
Earlier in February, a judge denied motions by Greenpeace to throw out
or limit parts of the case.
What is Greenpeace's position?
Representatives of the environmental organization founded over 50 years
ago said the company just wants to silence oil industry critics.
“This trial is a critical test of the future of the First Amendment,
both freedom of speech and peaceful protest, under the Trump
administration and beyond,” Greenpeace USA Interim Executive Director
Sushma Raman told reporters. “A bad ruling in this case could put our
rights and freedoms in jeopardy for all of us, whether we are
journalists, protesters or anyone who wants to engage in public debate.”
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Protesters against the Dakota Access oil pipeline congregate, Nov.
21, 2016, on a long-closed bridge on a state highway near Cannon
Ball., N.D. near their camp in southern North Dakota. (AP
Photo/James MacPherson, File)

Greenpeace USA helped support “nonviolent, direct-action training”
on safety and de-escalation at the protests, Senior Legal Adviser
Deepa Padmanabha said.
Energy Transfer is arguing that “anyone engaged in a training at a
protest should be held responsible for the actions of every person
at that protest,” Padmanabha said. “So it's pretty easy to see how,
if successful, this kind of tactic could have a serious chilling
effect on anyone who might consider participating in a protest.”
Earlier in February, Greenpeace International filed an
anti-intimidation suit in the District Court of Amsterdam against
Energy Transfer, saying the company acted wrongfully and should pay
costs and damages resulting from its “meritless" litigation.
What does Energy Transfer say?
An Energy Transfer spokesperson said the lawsuit is about Greenpeace
not following the law.
“It is not about free speech as they are trying to claim. We support
the rights of all Americans to express their opinions and lawfully
protest. However, when it is not done in accordance with our laws,
we have a legal system to deal with that,” Energy Transfer
spokeswoman Vicki Granado said in a statement.
The company filed a similar case in federal court in 2017, which a
judge dismissed in 2019. Soon after, Energy Transfer filed the state
court lawsuit now headed to trial.
Energy Transfer launched in 1996 with 20 employees and 200 miles
(320 kilometers) of natural gas pipelines. Today the 11,000-employee
company owns and operates over 125,000 miles (200,000 kilometers) of
pipelines and related facilities.
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