Trial begins in $300M lawsuit against Greenpeace over North Dakota
pipeline protests
[February 27, 2025] By
JACK DURA
MANDAN, N.D. (AP) — An attorney for a Texas pipeline company said
Wednesday at trial that he will prove various Greenpeace entities
coordinated delays and disruptions of a controversial oil pipeline's
construction in North Dakota, and defamed the company to its lenders.
Attorneys for the Greenpeace defendants told a jury there is no evidence
to back up the claims by Dallas-based Energy Transfer, which seeks
potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in damages from Greenpeace.
The case is tied to protests in 2016 and 2017 of the Dakota Access
Pipeline and its controversial Missouri River crossing upstream of the
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe's reservation. The tribe has long opposed the
pipeline as a risk to its water supply. The pipeline was completed in
2017.
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.
Greenpeace paid professional protesters to come to the area, sent
blockade supplies, organized or led protester trainings, passed
“critical intel” to the protesters and told untrue things to stop the
pipeline from being built, the plaintiffs' attorney, Trey Cox, told the
jury in his opening statement.

“They didn't think that there would ever be a day of reckoning, but that
day of reckoning begins today,” Cox said in opening statements.
Attorneys for the defendants emphasized what they said are distinctions
between the various Greenpeace entities, such as what they do and how
they're organized.
They said Greenpeace International and Greenpeace Fund Inc. had zero
involvement in the protests, while Greenpeace USA had six employees at
Standing Rock for five to 51 days. Greenpeace is committed to
nonviolence, and only got involved at Standing Rock because of tribal
outreach, the attorneys said.
“This was an Indigenous-led movement by the Native tribes, and we wanted
them to have the spotlight," said Greenpeace USA attorney Everett Jack
Jr.
One of nine alleged defamatory statements — that Energy Transfer
desecrated burial grounds and culturally important sites during
construction — was made many times by the tribe before any of the
Greenpeace statements, he said.
Cox said that statement was included in a letter sent to Energy
Transfer's banks and signed by the executive directors of Greenpeace
International and Greenpeace USA.
He added that Energy Transfer made 140 adjustments to its pipeline route
in order to respect sacred sites.
“Our goal was to be a good corporate citizen in North Dakota,” Cox said.
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Dakota Access pipeline protesters defy law enforcement officers who
are trying to force them from a camp on private land in the path of
pipeline construction, Oct. 27, 2016, near Cannon Ball, N.D. (AP
Photo/James MacPherson, File)
 More than 500 organizations from
more than 50 countries signed on to that letter, said Greenpeace
International attorney Courtney DeThomas, who described it as an act
of free expression.
No financial institution will testify that it
received, read or was influenced by the letter, which was signed
after thousands of protesters were already at Standing Rock,
DeThomas said.
Greenpeace representatives have said the lawsuit is an example of
corporations abusing the legal system to go after critics and is a
critical test of free speech and protest rights. An Energy Transfer
spokesperson said the case is about Greenpeace not following the
law, not free speech.
Greenpeace says the lawsuit is going after $300 million, citing a
figure from a previous federal case. The lawsuit complaint asks for
damages in an amount to be proved at trial.
Because of Greenpeace, Energy Transfer incurred over $82 million in
security, contractor and property costs, and lost $80 million of
profits, Cox told jurors. The pipeline was supposed to be completed
by Jan. 1, 2017, but wasn’t moving oil until five months later, he
said.
Greenpeace's “deceptive narrative scared off lenders" and Energy
Transfer lost half its banks, he said. The company suffered over $68
million in lost financing and spent $7.6 million for public
relations "to deal with these problems and lies” from the “whisper
campaign," Cox said.
But Jack said Greenpeace had nothing to do with the company's delays
in operating or refinancing. He also disputed how Energy Transfer is
claiming or calculating its damages. The company also has no expert
to back its claim of reputational harm, he said.
Jury selection took place earlier in the week and the estimated
five-week trial is now underway. Nine jurors and two alternates will
hear the case in Mandan, North Dakota.

The company filed a similar case in federal court in 2017, which a
judge dismissed in 2019. Energy Transfer subsequently filed the
lawsuit now at trial in state court.
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.
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