Cape Breton Post

Dakota Access oil pipeline begins service

- BY BLAKE NICHOLSON

The $3.8 billion Dakota Access pipeline began shipping oil for customers on Thursday, as Native American tribes that opposed the project vowed to continue fighting.

Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners announced that the 1,200-mile line carrying North Dakota oil through South Dakota and Iowa to a distributi­on point in Illinois had begun commercial service.

The Dakota Access pipeline and the Energy Transfer Crude Oil Pipeline from Illinois to the Gulf Coast together make up the $4.8 billion Bakken Pipeline system, which ETP said has commitment­s for about 520,000 barrels of oil daily.

“The pipeline will transport light, sweet crude oil from North Dakota to major refining markets in a more direct, cost-effective, safer and more environmen­tally responsibl­e manner than other modes of transporta­tion, including rail or truck,” the company said in a statement.

Grow America’s Infrastruc­ture Now, a coalition of businesses, trade associatio­ns, and labour groups that benefit from infrastruc­ture developmen­t, issued a statement saying projects such as Dakota Access “are key components to unlocking our nation’s economic potential and creating jobs.”

Four Sioux tribes in the Dakotas are still fighting in federal court in Washington, D.C., hoping to persuade a judge to shut down the line.

Tribes and environmen­tal groups fear it might pollute water sources.

More than half a year of protests in North Dakota resulted in 761 arrests before President Donald Trump’s administra­tion and the courts allowed the pipeline to be completed earlier this year.

“Now that the Dakota Access pipeline is fully operationa­l, we find it more urgent than ever that the courts and administra­tion address the risks posed to the drinking water of millions of American citizens,” Standing Rock Sioux Chairman Dave Archambaul­t said in a statement. “This pipeline became operationa­l today, yet it has already leaked at least three times.”

The leaks came as the line was being prepared for service.

 ?? TOM STROMME/THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? In this Oct. 5, 2016, file photo, heavy equipment is seen at a site where sections of the Dakota Access pipeline were being buried near the town of St. Anthony in Morton County, N.D.
TOM STROMME/THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE VIA AP In this Oct. 5, 2016, file photo, heavy equipment is seen at a site where sections of the Dakota Access pipeline were being buried near the town of St. Anthony in Morton County, N.D.

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