Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Company: Oil in pipeline under Missouri River reservoir

- By Jeff Baenen

The Dakota Access pipeline developer said Monday that it has placed oil in the pipeline under a Missouri River reservoir in North Dakota and that it’s preparing to put the pipeline into service.

Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners made the announceme­nt in a brief court filing with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. The announceme­nt marks a significan­t developmen­t in the long battle over the project that will move North Dakota oil 2000 miles (1930 kilometers) through South Dakota and Iowa to a shipping point in Illinois. The pipeline is three months behind schedule due to large protests and the objections of two American Indian tribes who say it threatens their water supply and cultural sites.

ETP’s filing did not say when the company expected the pipeline to be completely operating, and a spokeswoma­n did not immediatel­y return an email seeking additional details.

“Oil has been placed in the Dakota Access Pipeline underneath Lake Oahe. Dakota Access is currently commission­ing the full pipeline and is preparing to place the pipeline into the filing stated.

Despite the announceme­nt, the battle isn’t over. The Standing Rock and Cheyenne River Sioux tribes still have an unresolved lawsuit that seeks to stop the project. The Standing Rock chairman did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment on ETP’s announceme­nt.

The tribes argue that a rupture in the section that crosses under Lake Oahe would threaten their water supply and sacred sites and would prevent them from practicing their religion, which requires clean water.

The company disputes the tribes’ claims and says the $3.8 billion pipeline is safe. service,”

The tribes in December held up the project by successful­ly pushing the U.S. government for a full environmen­tal study of the Lake Oahe crossing, which is in southern North Dakota. But the Army Corps of Engineers, which manages the Missouri River for the government, rescinded the study and gave the company permission to complete the pipeline at the urging of President Donald Trump shortly after he took office.

There were months of protests against the pipeline, mainly in North Dakota, where opponents set up a camp on Corps land between the Standing Rock Reservatio­n and the pipeline route.

 ?? TOM STROMME — THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE VIA AP, FILE ?? This file aerial photo shows a site where the final phase of the Dakota Access Pipeline will take place with boring equipment routing the pipeline undergroun­d and across Lake Oahe to connect with the existing pipeline in Emmons County in Cannon Ball,...
TOM STROMME — THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE VIA AP, FILE This file aerial photo shows a site where the final phase of the Dakota Access Pipeline will take place with boring equipment routing the pipeline undergroun­d and across Lake Oahe to connect with the existing pipeline in Emmons County in Cannon Ball,...

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