The Palm Beach Post

Judge orders new fed review of Keystone oil pipeline path

Neb. route changes need environmen­t oversight, he rules.

- By Grant Schulte

LINCOLN, NEB. — A federal judge has ordered the U.S. State Department to conduct a more thorough review of the Keystone XL oil pipeline’s proposed pathway after Nebraska state regulators changed the route, raising the possibilit­y of further delays to a project first proposed in 2008.

U.S. District Judge Brian Morris of Montana said in a ruling that the State Department must supplement its 2014 environmen­tal impact study of the project to consider the new route. Morris declined to strike down the federal permit for the project, approved by President Donald Trump in March 2017.

The Nebraska Public Service Commission rejected pipeline developer TransCanad­a’s preferred route in November 2017, but approved a different pathway that stretches farther to the east. The “mainline alternativ­e” route is five miles longer than the company’s preferred route, cuts through six different Nebraska counties and runs parallel to an existing TransCanad­a-owned pipeline for 89 miles.

State Department officials “have yet to analyze the mainline alternativ­e route,” Morris wrote in his ruling. The State Department has “the obligation to analyze new informatio­n relevant to the environmen­tal impacts of its decision.”

Last month, the State Department declared the pipeline would not have a major impact on Nebraska’s water, land or wildlife. The report said the company could mitigate any damage caused.

It’s not clear whether the additional review will delay the 1,184-mile project. TransCanad­a spokesman Matthew John said company officials are reviewing the judge’s decision, and noted that the project has already faced numerous federal reviews. He said company officials are still working with local, state and federal stakeholde­rs.

“We do not anticipate that the ruling will impact the current constructi­on preparatio­n activities we are currently undertakin­g,” John said in an email.

Environmen­talists, Native American tribes and a coalition of landowners have prevented the company from moving ahead with constructi­on. In addition to the federal lawsuit in Montana that seeks to halt the project, opponents also have a lawsuit pending before the Nebraska Supreme Court. Oral arguments in the Nebraska case aren’t expected until October.

Critics of the project have raised concerns about spills that could contaminat­e groundwate­r and the property rights of affected landowners.

Pipeline opponents cheered the decision and said they were confident that the courts would find other violations of federal law raised in the lawsuit.

“We are pleased that Judge Morris has rejected all of the excuses raised by the Trump administra­tion and TransCanad­a in attempting to justify the federal government’s failure to address TransCanad­a’s new route through Nebraska,” said Stephan Volker, an attorney for the environmen­tal and Native American groups that filed the Montana lawsuit..

The State Department’s new report noted two major spills in South Dakota involving the original Keystone pipeline, which went into operation in 2010.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS 2015 ?? The Keystone pipeline brings oil from TransCanad­a’s facilities in Hardisty, Alberta, seen here in 2015. The pipeline has been a focus of environmen­tal protests for years, and now a federal judge has ordered a fresh review of changes to its route.
JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS 2015 The Keystone pipeline brings oil from TransCanad­a’s facilities in Hardisty, Alberta, seen here in 2015. The pipeline has been a focus of environmen­tal protests for years, and now a federal judge has ordered a fresh review of changes to its route.

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