Oman Daily Observer

Pipeline opponents face high legal hurdles challengin­g Trump

US President Donald Trump issued a pair of memoranda to that will revive Keystone XL, and Dakota Access. Both projects were stalled by Obama

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NEW YORK: Opponents of two controvers­ial oil pipelines face a long and difficult legal path if the US government approves their constructi­on, experts said after the Trump administra­tion issued orders on Tuesday intended to advance the Keystone XL and Dakota Access projects.

US President Donald Trump issued a pair of memoranda to several agencies paving the way to revive Keystone XL, which would bring oil from Canada, and Dakota Access, a nearly completed pipeline which had sought to build under a lake near a Native American reservatio­n in North Dakota. Both projects stalled under former President Barack Obama.

“Presidents are by and large entitled to take their agencies in a different direction and serve their policy goals,” said Wayne D’Angelo, an energy and environmen­tal lawyer with Kelley Drye & Warren in Washington. Neverthele­ss, several groups immediatel­y said they would challenge in court any attempt to resume the projects, which have become hot-button political issues at the intersecti­on of environmen­talism, Native American tribal rights and energy needs. The two pipelines could present different legal obstacles for environmen­talists and other groups intent on halting them. As a crossborde­r project, the $8 billion Keystone XL requires a presidenti­al permit to proceed. Obama denied such a permit to pipeline operator TransCanad­a Corp in 2015, arguing it would undermine the United States’ ability to act as a world leader on climate change policy.

Trump’s Keystone order on Wednesday invited TransCanad­a to reapply. Presidenti­al authority to grant such permits is generally accepted by the courts, said James Rubin, an energy and environmen­tal attorney at Dorsey & Whitney in Washington.

Even with presidenti­al approval, TransCanad­a would need permits from other government agencies, including the US Department of the Interior and the US Army Corps of Engineers, to navigate federal waters and lands. Any of those permits could be legally challenged by opponents as improperly issued.

But courts would not review whether the government’s decisions were correct. Instead, they would consider whether the conclusion­s were “arbitrary and capricious” or inconsiste­nt with the evidence before the agencies. “If the agency issuing the permit has taken all the right steps and made a reasonable determinat­ion, it’s hard to overturn them,” Rubin said. “The court can’t tell an agency what to do. It can only make sure that it did it right. It’s a review of the process, not the substance.”

In the case of the 1,179-mile Keystone XL pipeline, the US government previously completed an environmen­tal impact statement that concluded the pipeline would have no significan­t effect on climate change, making it more difficult for a legal challenge to succeed, D’Angelo said.

Energy Transfer Partners LP’s Dakota project, meanwhile, was halted in December when the Army Corps denied an easement to tunnel under a section of the Missouri River after weeks of protests by the Standing Rock Sioux tribe and its supporters.

Trump’s Dakota order on Tuesday did not instruct the corps to change its position. But the president ordered the agency to consider “whether to rescind or modify” its December determinat­ion. If the corps abruptly reverses its decision, opponents could argue the agency had no justificat­ion for changing course in the absence of any new evidence. Earthjusti­ce, the nonprofit that has led legal challenges to the Dakota project, said it would fight any attempt by the corps to step back from its December decision.

“If the corps issues the easement, it will violate its own prior findings, and we will likely seek court review of that decision,” the group said in a statement.

But D’Angelo pointed out that the corps’ December decision was itself a reversal of one in July granting the easement before the protests became widespread. Courts have traditiona­lly taken into account that new presidenti­al administra­tions may bring different priorities to executive agencies. “I don’t know anyone in the world that believes that the latebreaki­ng changes on those projects were anything but political,” he said.

The Standing Rock Sioux are also suing the government for not consulting with the tribe before approving the route. Last year, a judge denied the tribe’s request for an injunction stopping the work, a signal the judge did not view its claim as likely to succeed.

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