Houston Chronicle

Law restrictin­g oil trains contested

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BILLINGS, Mont. — Attorneys general for North Dakota and Montana asked the Trump administra­tion Wednesday to overrule a Washington state law that imposed new restrictio­ns on oil trains from the Northern Plains to guard against explosive derailment­s.

In a legal petition to the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, Montana Attorney General Tim Fox and North Dakota’s Wayne Stenehjem said federal authority over railroads preempts the state law.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat, in May signed the measure that requires oil shipped by rail through the state to have more volatile gases removed to reduce the risk of explosive and potentiall­y deadly derailment­s.

The move followed a string of fiery and explosive oil train derailment­s over the past decade, including a 2013 accident in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, that killed 47 people. The explosions drew widespread public attention to the volatile nature of Bakken crude shipments.

But opponents say the new restrictio­ns would make Pacific Northwest refineries effectivel­y off-limits to crude from the Bakken region, one of the nation’s most productive oil fields straddling the North Dakota-Montana border. That’s because the process of treating the oil to make it less volatile would be too expensive to justify, they said.

“It’s pretty clear in this the state of Washington oversteppe­d its bounds,” Fox said. “The effect would be terrible, both on the economies of North Dakota and Montana and also how it offends the rule of law.”

Fox and Stenehjem also warned that allowing Washington’s law to stand could inadverten­tly undermine safety, by subjecting the railroad industry to a hodge-podge of state laws instead of a common federal standard. Shipping the region’s crude by rail has become common practice due to a limited number of pipelines.

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