Houston Chronicle

Battle growing over emissions pipelines

- By Mitch Smith and Alyssa Schukar

HARTFORD, S.D. — For more than a decade, the Midwest was the site of bitter clashes over plans for thousand-mile pipelines meant to carry crude oil beneath cornfields and cattle ranches.

Now high-dollar pipeline fights are happening again, but with a twist.

Instead of oil, these projects would carry millions of tons of carbon dioxide from ethanol plants to be injected into undergroun­d rock formations rather than dispersed as pollutants in the air.

What is playing out is a very different kind of environmen­tal battle, a huge test not just for farmers and landowners but for emerging technologi­es promoted as ways to safely store planet warming carbon.

The technology has generated support from powerful politician­s in both parties, as well as major farming organizati­ons, ethanol producers and some environmen­tal groups.

Supporters, including some farmers who have signed agreements to have a pipeline buried on their property, frame the ideas being proposed by two companies as a win for both the economy and environmen­t. They say the pipelines, boosted by federal tax credits, including from the Inflation Reduction Act that President Joe Biden signed last year, would lower carbon emissions while aiding the agricultur­al economy through continued ethanol production.

But opponents are concerned about property rights and safety, and are not convinced of the projects’ claimed environmen­tal benefits. They have forged unlikely alliances that have blurred the region’s political lines, uniting conservati­ve farmers with liberal urbanites, white people with Native Americans, small-government Republican­s with climate-conscious Democrats.

The result, both sides agree, is a high-stakes economic and environmen­tal struggle pitting pipeline advocates against opponents who honed their political and legal strategies over nearly 15 years of fighting the Dakota Access oil pipeline, which has been in operation since 2017, and the Keystone XL oil pipeline, which was never built.

There is no question that technology exists to remove carbon from industrial sites and to transport and store it undergroun­d. Less clear: Is carbon capture really an effective counterwei­ght to the overheatin­g planet? And, if so, at what cost?

‘A very well-laid-out plan’

Orrin Geide, who raises corn, soybeans, cattle and bison near Hartford, S.D., has fought a pipeline before.

Nearly 10 years ago, Geide learned his land was on the route for the Dakota Access Pipeline, which carries oil from North Dakota to Illinois. He appeared with his sister in local news articles and pleaded with state regulators to block constructi­on. He said he agreed to let the pipeline cross his land only when constructi­on felt inevitable.

Now, Geide finds himself along another pipeline route, this time for an unfamiliar technology that he said feels even riskier than the oil flowing beneath his bison.

“If this goes through, I’ll have to rethink what the future will hold,” said Geide, whose farm is on the path for the roughly 2,000-mile pipeline proposed by Summit Carbon Solutions, which would carry carbon dioxide across five states to undergroun­d storage in North Dakota. If built, supporters say, it would be the largest such pipeline in the world.

When Dakota Access and Keystone XL were proposed years ago, they fused together a politicall­y mixed band of farmers, Native Americans and environmen­talists who waged a two-front war against the pipelines through relentless litigation and spirited protest.

Despite the obvious difference­s from oil pipelines, the new carbon pipeline proposals have mobilized some of the same activists and even involved some of the same acreage. While many landowners have signed easements for the carbon pipelines — access to more than 63% of land on the Summit route has been secured — others have refused.

This time, said Brian Jorde, a lawyer who represente­d Keystone XL landowners and now represents many farmers on the carbon routes, opponents have a playbook to guide them. Landowners have tried to prevent the pipeline companies from surveying their land, pressed county government­s to enact moratorium­s on carbon pipelines and signed up en masse to intervene in state permitting hearings.

“From being through an 11year battle and all the twists and turns and the hundreds of lawsuits” on Keystone XL, Jorde said, “we’ve got a very well-laidout plan.”

‘For the greater good’

In a world already being reshaped by climate change, the promise of carbon capture is tantalizin­g. The reality is complicate­d.

The idea behind the Summit pipeline is to take carbon dioxide from ethanol plants, where it is a byproduct of corn being turned into fuel, and transport it for undergroun­d storage. A similar project proposed by Navigator CO2 Ventures would keep some of its carbon above ground for commercial use and store the rest undergroun­d in Illinois.

“This is not just about the landowner that owns the land today, this is very much about a generation­al, transition­al move,” said Lee Blank, the CEO of Summit. He said he was making the case to farmers that carbon capture had the potential to “be as significan­t for the agricultur­al marketplac­e as the ethanol space was itself.”

The technology, if not the specific pipeline projects, has received support from several state-level Republican­s, along with votes of confidence in Washington, where both the Trump and Biden administra­tions made building the pipelines more lucrative.

“It’s just for the greater good of our climate,” said Ron Alverson, a retired farmer in South Dakota who is on the board of Dakota Ethanol, which plans to use one of the pipelines to sequester carbon from its facility, and the board of the American Coalition for Ethanol.

The projects, if built, would be a major expansion of the country’s existing network of more than 5,300 miles of carbon pipelines. Some along the routes question whether the technology is fully proven and safe, citing the explosion of a carbon pipeline in Mississipp­i in 2020 that led to the hospitaliz­ation of 45 people and a federal review of safety standards.

Some groups, including the National Wildlife Federation, are at least somewhat supportive of the technology, calling for carbon capture as part of an “all-of-the-above” approach to reducing emissions. Others, including Food & Water Watch and the Sierra Club, dismiss the projects as blatant “greenwashi­ng” that could lead to profit for energy companies contributi­ng to global warming without addressing the root causes of climate change.

Arguing over rights

Karla Lems is a rural landowner, a conservati­ve Republican and a newly elected member of the South Dakota House of Representa­tives. She is also a vocal opponent of carbon pipelines.

Lems, who owns land along both the Navigator and Summit routes, said she did not see the merits of the projects and did not appreciate “private companies coming in and saying, ‘Well, you know, if we get the permit that we’re asking for, we’re going to roll through here whether you like it or not.’”

As negotiatio­ns continue with individual landowners, the debates over the pipelines’ fates are shifting to state legislatur­es and permitting boards.

Bills that would make permitting or constructi­on of pipelines more difficult were introduced this year in Iowa, South Dakota and North Dakota, all Republican-controlled states.

One such bill sponsored by Lems passed the South Dakota House but failed to advance in the Senate.

Just like with the oil pipelines, both sides have already proved they are willing to go to court to press their arguments.

“It’s kind of David vs. Goliath, that’s how I feel,” Lems said. “Because they have the money. They have the backing. And it may come down to moving it through the court system and seeing what the court would do with it.”

 ?? Photos by Alyssa Schukar/New York Times ?? The Dakota Ethanol plant cranks out fuel in Wentworth, S.D.. Two proposals that would transport carbon dioxide from ethanol plants to undergroun­d storage have led to a high-stakes economic and environmen­tal fight.
Photos by Alyssa Schukar/New York Times The Dakota Ethanol plant cranks out fuel in Wentworth, S.D.. Two proposals that would transport carbon dioxide from ethanol plants to undergroun­d storage have led to a high-stakes economic and environmen­tal fight.
 ?? ?? Orrin Geide watches the bison on his farm near Hartford, S.D. He opposes the proposed carbon capture pipeline that would pass through his land.
Orrin Geide watches the bison on his farm near Hartford, S.D. He opposes the proposed carbon capture pipeline that would pass through his land.
 ?? ?? Local landowners in Valley Springs, S.D., look at a Facebook video promoting the proposed carbon capture pipeline that would pass through their property.
Local landowners in Valley Springs, S.D., look at a Facebook video promoting the proposed carbon capture pipeline that would pass through their property.

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