Imperial Valley Press

Court: Louisiana oil pipeline constructi­on can continue

- BY KEVIN MCGILL AND MICHAEL KUNZELMAN

NEW ORLEANS — Constructi­on of a crude oil pipeline through Louisiana’s environmen­tally fragile Atchafalay­a Basin swamp can continue under a federal appeals court decision handed down Friday.

A divided panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a lower court’s preliminar­y injunction blocking constructi­on of the Bayou Bridge Pipeline.

The 2-1 decision was a victory for Bayou Bridge Pipeline LLC, whose lawyers had urged the panel to throw out U.S. District Judge Shelly Dick’s injunction in April.

Dick issued a preliminar­y injunction in February stopping pipeline constructi­on in the Atchafalay­a Basin swamp until a lawsuit by project opponents is resolved.

But her injunction was suspended by a 5th Circuit panel in March, so constructi­on continued even before Friday’s ruling.

The company recently told the court that it expects to complete constructi­on by October.

The decision comes in a lawsuit by environmen­tal groups, including Atchafalay­a Basinkeepe­r, Waterkeepe­r Alliance, The Gulf Restoratio­n Network and the Sierra Club. They sued Bayou Bridge Pipeline LLC and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The lawsuit says the Corps violated the Clean Water Act and other environmen­tal laws when it approved a permit for the project.

Dick concluded the project’s irreversib­le environmen­tal damage outweighed the economic harm that a delay brought to the company. She said the project potentiall­y threatens the hydrology of the basin and “poses the threat of destructio­n of already diminishin­g wetlands.” She also agreed with environmen­tal groups that centuries-old “legacy” trees can’t be replaced once they’re cut down.

But Friday’s opinion by Judge Edith Jones, joined by Judge James Graves, said Dick had “misperceiv­ed the applicable regulation­s,” and that the Corps’ environmen­tal assessment was sufficient.

Judge Thomas Reavley dissented, saying the Corps failed to adequately address questions involving how significan­t the environmen­tal effects of the pipeline will be and the steps need to mitigate the damage.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GERALD HERBERT ?? In this April 27, photo, a old logging canal cuts through Bayou Sorrel in the Atchafalay­a River Basin in Louisiana. A federal appeals court’s ruling allows constructi­on to continue on a crude oil pipeline through an environmen­tally fragile Louisiana...
AP PHOTO/GERALD HERBERT In this April 27, photo, a old logging canal cuts through Bayou Sorrel in the Atchafalay­a River Basin in Louisiana. A federal appeals court’s ruling allows constructi­on to continue on a crude oil pipeline through an environmen­tally fragile Louisiana...

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