Houston Chronicle

Executives fondly recall days when pipelines were ignored

- By James Osborne james.osborne@chron.com twitter.com/osborneja

For more than a century, oil and gas pipelines were built beneath the United States with nary any notice from the public.

But pipelines executives lamented this week that since the rise of the “Keep It in the Ground” movement, projects were being delayed by a rising tide of protests, litigation and vandalism.

“The level of intensity has ramped up,” Kinder Morgan CEO Steven Kean said Thursday at the CERAWeek energy conference hosted by IHS Markit. “There’s more opponents, and it’s more organized.”

Speaking onstage with fellow pipeline chief executives Kelcy Warren of Energy Transfer Partners and Russ Girling of TransCanad­a, Kean recounted how a group of environmen­talists closed the valves on their pipeline network in the western United States in what appeared to be a coordinate­d effort across multiple states.

Another activist tried to drill a hole in one of Energy Transfer Partners’ pipelines, Warren said.

“Talk about someone that needs to be removed from the gene pool,” he said.

In a move to shore up public opinion, the typically media-shy Warren said he had increased Energy Transfer’s presence on social media platforms.

“There’s lies being told about our company that we have to police,” Warren said. “All of us have to bear that cost.”

The anti-oil movement is already having an impact on developmen­t in the United States, Girling said.

But he argued it had done little to slow constructi­on on a global level.

“As we have stalled developmen­t, others have taken up the slack,” he said. And in other countries, “we’re seeing less care to the environmen­t and human rights.”

 ?? Associated Press file ?? Protests, vandalism and lawsuits confront companies.
Associated Press file Protests, vandalism and lawsuits confront companies.

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