The Guardian (USA)

Dakota Access pipeline developer misses year-end deadline to plant trees

- Associated Press

The developer of the Dakota Access oil pipeline missed a year-end deadline to plant thousands of trees along the pipeline corridor in North Dakota. The company said it was still complying with a settlement of allegation­s it violated state rules during constructi­on.

Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners (ETP), which built the $3.8bn pipeline that is now moving North Dakota oil to Illinois, is falling back on a provision of the September 2017 agreement that provides more time should the company run into problems. The company must provide 20,000 trees to county soil conservati­on districts along the pipeline’s 359-mile route in North Dakota.

The deal with North Dakota’s public service commission settled allegation­s that ETP removed too many trees in some areas and that it improperly handled a pipeline route change after discoverin­g Native American artifacts.

The agreement required the company to replant trees and shrubs at a higher ratio in the disputed areas, along with an additional 20,000 trees along the entire route. ETP filed documents in October detailing efforts by a contractor to plant 141,000 trees and shrubs, but the PSC asked the company a month later to provide more documentat­ion that it had complied with all settlement terms.

Company attorney Lawrence Bender recently submitted a report from contractor KC Harvey Environmen­tal further detailing the replanting efforts in the disputed areas. He noted that in some areas where landowners refused trees, the trees were reallocate­d to other landowners “who had the space and desire to accommodat­e more plantings”.

Only about 8,800 of the required 20,000 additional trees were planted in 2018. There were several factors, including equipment and staffing issues, difficulti­es finding willing landowners and poor planting conditions, according to Perennial Environmen­tal Services,

which ETP hired to handle the work.

 ??  ?? A site where the final phase of the Dakota Access pipeline near the Missouri river took place with boring equipment routing the pipeline undergroun­d on 13 February 2017. Photograph: Tom Stromme/AP
A site where the final phase of the Dakota Access pipeline near the Missouri river took place with boring equipment routing the pipeline undergroun­d on 13 February 2017. Photograph: Tom Stromme/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States