The Prince George Citizen

Keystone XL company makes strategic move in South Dakota

-

BUFFALO, S.D. — The company planning the Keystone XL oil pipeline is moving to condemn private land in South Dakota.

TransCanad­a Corp. has filed eminent domain petitions in state court against parcels of Harding County land owned by two families, The Rapid City Journal reported .

At least one family plans to fight. Resident Jeffrey Jensen said he’ll take the matter to court if necessary. “I got nothing to lose. Wouldn’t bother me in the least,” he said. “They (TransCanad­a) actually want to give less than they did before on my first easement.”

Jensen initially signed a five-year contract with the company for the easement. But the company’s easement expired after President Barack Obama’s administra­tion denied Keystone permitting for the pipeline to pass the internatio­nal border from Canada to the U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has since reversed that decision with an executive order .

The $8 billion, 1,905-kilometre pipeline would carry oil from Canada through Montana, and South Dakota to Steele City, Nebraska, where it would connect with the original Keystone pipeline that runs to Texas Gulf Coast refineries. The Keystone XL pipeline would provide a more direct and wider transfer of crude oil than the current Keystone line, company officials said.

The company has 94 per cent of the private property easements needed for the project. The pipeline would cross over 300 private parcels in the state. The company has yet to secure easements on state land.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada