National Post (National Edition)

Transcanad­a does deal with pipe protesters

Specific to Texas, Ohlahoma Keystone sections

- BY LAUREL BRUBAKER CALKINS

HOUSTON • TransCanad­a

Corp. reached an agreement with some protesters to end months of blockades and demonstrat­ions aimed at disrupting constructi­on of the Keystone XL Canadian oil sands pipeline in Texas and Oklahoma.

The protesters agreed not to trespass on pipeline easements or at TransCanad­a offices anywhere along the southern leg of the pipeline, which stretches from Cushing, Okla., to the refinery industry complex on the Texas Gulf coast, according to an agreed judgment and permanent injunction signed Jan. 25.

The accord includes any attempt at “chaining, shackling, binding or attaching a person’s body or any other

We will continue to speak out

object, article or mechanism to Keystone equipment to immobilize, stop, halt or arrest Keystone equipment or constructi­on activities or operations on Keystone property,’’ according to papers signed by attorneys for both sides.

The agreement was negotiated by lawyers for TransCanad­a and Tar Sands Blockade, who were gathered in state court in Quitman, Tex., about 97 kilometres east of Dallas, for a hearing to extend a temporary restrainin­g order granted against some protesters in October, David Dodson, a spokesman for Calgary-based TransCanad­a, said Monday.

The agreement covers several environmen­tal groups and 20 individual protesters, Mr. Dodson said in an emailed statement.

Ron Seifert, an activist with Tar Sands Blockade, said the agreement doesn’t bind any- one unaffiliat­ed with the parties to the deal. He said the activists were being threatened by the pipeline company with a US$5-million lawsuit for delaying constructi­on.

“There are no limitation­s on speech by any of these individual­s or organizati­ons, and the Blockade will continue to speak out against this dangerous project,” Mr. Seifert said Monday. “TransCanad­a is just wrong if they think that limiting the rights of a few Texans will squash the grassroots resistance to this project.”

Wood County District Judge Timothy Boswell had urged the sides to settle their difference­s out of court, Mr. Dodson said. The resulting deal extended beyond that single county to include demonstrat­ions aimed at interferin­g with pipeline constructi­on activities throughout Keystone’s entire southern leg.

TransCanad­a has been battling environmen­tal protesters and landowners in multiple locations along its 2,151mile Keystone XL pipeline, which is intended to carry diluted bitumen obtained from Canadian oil sands. The protesters sought to highlight what they claim is the Keystone’s potential for environmen­tal catastroph­e, should the line leak or rupture.

Tar Sands Blockade supported protesters who occupied treetop encampment­s and chained themselves to constructi­on equipment along the pipeline route through East Texas since the middle of last year.

“TransCanad­a has obtained all of the permits and legal approvals to build the Gulf Coast Pipeline, and this judgment reinforces that,’’ Mr. Dodson said. “We hope this will allow our constructi­on activities to move forward without harassment and the safety concerns that these protestors and organizati­ons have created.’’

Mr. Seifert said activists are urging “other organizati­ons and other groups that have become mobilized by these protests” to continue the fight.

“This is far from over,” he said.

 ?? ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG NEWS FILES ?? A mock oil pipeline is carried by protesters during a Keystone XL tar sands oil pipeline demonstrat­ion near the White House in Washington, D.C., in November 2011.
ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG NEWS FILES A mock oil pipeline is carried by protesters during a Keystone XL tar sands oil pipeline demonstrat­ion near the White House in Washington, D.C., in November 2011.

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