The Guardian (USA)

Dakota access pipeline: court strikes down permits in victory for Standing Rock Sioux

- Nina Lakhani

The future of the controvers­ial Dakota Access pipeline has been thrown into question after a federal court on Wednesday struck down its permits and ordered a comprehens­ive environmen­tal review.

The US army corps of engineers was ordered to conduct a full environmen­tal impact statement (EIS), after the Washington DC court ruled that existing permits violated the National Environmen­tal Policy Act (Nepa).

The ruling is a huge victory for the Standing Rock Sioux tribe of North Dakota, which rallied support from across the world and sued the US government in a campaign to stop the environmen­tally risky pipeline being built on tribal lands.

“After years of commitment to defending our water and earth, we welcome this news of a significan­t legal win,” said the tribal chairman, Mike Faith. “It’s humbling to see how actions we took to defend our ancestral homeland continue to inspire national conversati­ons about how our choices ultimately affect this planet.”

In December 2016, the Obama administra­tion denied permits for the pipeline to cross the Missouri river and ordered a full EIS to analyze alternativ­e routes and the impact on the tribe’s treaty rights.

In his first week in office, Donald

Trump signed an executive order to expedite constructi­on. Constructi­on of the 1,200-mile pipeline was completed in June 2017.

The tribe challenged the permits – and won. As a result, the corps was ordered to redo its environmen­tal analysis, which it did without taking into considerat­ion tribal concerns or expert analysis.

The pipeline continued to transport oil from North Dakota to Illinois. The tribe and EarthJusti­ce, an environmen­tal law not-for-profit group, sued again.

In his ruling on Wednesday, the federal judge James Boasberg, an

 ??  ?? Dakota Access Pipeline water protectors in Standing Rock, North Dakota, in 2017. The Standing Rock Sioux chief welcomed the court’s action on Wednesday. Photograph: Michael Nigro/REX/Shuttersto­ck
Dakota Access Pipeline water protectors in Standing Rock, North Dakota, in 2017. The Standing Rock Sioux chief welcomed the court’s action on Wednesday. Photograph: Michael Nigro/REX/Shuttersto­ck

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