Shaun King, a writer for the New York Daily News, has uploaded what appears to be a recorded audio file of Energy Transfer Partnersโ Chief Operating Officer saying that โelection night changed everythingโ for the company as it relates to its embattled Dakota Access Pipeline.
King stated on social media and on the SoundCloud page on which he posted the file that a source sent him the file on December 13, hours after Matthew Ramsey โ COO of Energy Transfer Partners โ gave his speech. The source who gave King the audio, he explains on SoundCloud, โclaimed to be in a corporate meeting at Energy Transfer Partnersโ and told him that the person speaking was Matthew Ramsey, the COO of Energy Transfer Partners. King also wrote that the recording was made during a mandatory company meeting.
โIโve got to tell you, election night changed everything,โ Ramsey apparently said in the 10-minute clip, the authenticity of which DeSmog could not independently verify. โWe now are going into a transition where we are going to have a new President of the United States who gets it. He understands what weโre doing here and we fully expect that as soon as he gets inaugurated his team is going to move to get the final approvals done and weโll begin to put [Dakota Access] across Lake Oahe.โ
Dakota Access has yet to receive the easement permit it needs from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in order to cross Lake Oahe, which the company has publicly decried. Ramsey said in the clip, one in which the voice sounds similar to his voice heard in a November 21 company conference call, that it will take about 65 days to cross the lake once they get the permit.
Energy Transfer Partners recently saw one of the members of its Board of Directors, former Texas Republican Governor Rick Perry, nominated as U.S. Secretary of Energy by President-elect Donald Trump. Perry also sits on the Board of Directors of Dakota Access LLC co-owner, Sunoco Logistics.
Two days after the presidential election, Energy Transfer Partners CEO Kelcy Warren expressed a similar sense of jubilation about the prospects for Dakota Access when Trump assumes the White House.
โHaving a government that actually backs up what they say that weโre going to support infrastructure, weโre going to support job creation, weโre going to support growth in America, and then actually does it?,โ Warren told The Dallas Morning News. โMy God, this is going to be refreshing.โ
Warren was a major donor to Perryโs short-lived run for president during the Republican Party primary cycle and also served as a major donor to Trumpโs presidential campaign. Warren also sat on the advisory board for Perryโs run for president.
Ramsey and Energy Transfer Partners spokeswoman Vicki Granado did not immediately respond to a request for comment from DeSmog.
โQuite a Fightโ
In the tape, the voice that appears to belong to Ramsey spoke about the political battle ensuing over Dakota Access, which has lasted almost two years and recently stalled temporarily after the Army Corps of Engineers said it needed more time to do a more thorough environmental impact statement for the prospective Lake Oahe easement. The fight against the pipeline has engendered one of the largest cross-tribe mobilizations of Native American people in U.S. history.
โThis has been quite a fight here on [Dakota Access],โ remarked Ramsey. โSo let me just tell you, make no mistake about it, this pipeline is going through. Itโs going through exactly where we have planned.โ
He also said Energy Transfer Partners โalways, always plays by the rulesโ as it relates to following the letter of the law for its projects, saying that Dakota Access LLC โcrossed every โtโ [and] dotted every โiโโ relating to rules and regulations.
Meeting With Police
Police repression has also played a central role in the ongoing Dakota Access fight and so the audio confirms what many likely already thought. That is, law enforcement has worked closely alongside Dakota Access LLC to fend off those fighting against the project.
โWe met with some of the officials in North Dakota [during a recent trip to the state],โ said Ramsey. โWe met with the National Sheriffโs Association. People are tired of this. Theyโre tired of seeing whatโs going on in the community and we think that the tide has turned and people are understanding what a great project this would be for the State of North Dakota. That came right out of the governorโs mouth. Heโs very much in favor of this thing. So, I think weโre off and running on [Dakota Access].โ
โI know that everybody in this room has had to deal with the protesters. Everybody in this room has had to read on social media the misinformation thatโs out there. Itโs not fair. We feel like keeping our head down and doing what we do best, which is to put this pipeline in the ground, is the best thing we can do. We never stopped doing that.โ
โA lot of times people say to me, and Iโd like to answer this question more directly, โWhy donโt we just immediately answer back every time something is stated wrong about the company and what weโre doing?โ,โ said Ramsey.
โThis isnโt about water,โ he says.
This secret audio was recorded THIS MORNING after 150,000 gallons of oil leaked into a nearby creek.
โ Shaun King (@ShaunKing) December 13, 2016
โNot About WaterโฆLots and Lots of Moneyโ
Concerns about water contamination and a pipeline spill have played a central role in galvanizing support for those who have protested alongside the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. Indeed, participants in the protests and encampment call themselves โwater protectors.โ But the audio captures Ramsey dismissing those concerns out of hand, saying it is โnot about waterโ at all.
โAnd you have to understand, and I didnโt really understand this until I got deep into it. This is not really about water. This is not about [unintelligible]โฆ this is about environmental activism. And itโs nothing more than that.โ
But as King pointed out, a pipeline spill actually took place the morning Ramsey gave his speech, however. That spill of 176,000 gallons of oil into a creek ensued just 150 miles from the Standing Rock protest site.
Ramsey also alluded to the โKeep It In The Groundโ campaign, saying that Dakota Access fit under the umbrella of those demanding to keep all fossil fuels in the ground. Keep It In The Ground, though, did not target the pipeline as part of its broader campaign and focuses on supply, not midstream assets like pipelines.
โThese are people that are pushing to keep all fossil fuels in the ground, at every angle. And make no mistake. This is an event that they are using to raise lots and lots of money. If they can create a cause and they can create a lot of publicity, which theyโve clearly done here, itโs an avenue for them to raise money. Not only to fight us on this project, but to fight all infrastructure projects like this in the United States,โ Ramsey claimed.
โSo weโll continue to fight through this thing. But please, please, please be confident in this company. We are going to get this thing through in short order. We couldnโt be more confident in that fact. And look for us to be pouring oil through this thing in spring of next year.โ
โWater Is Everythingโ
In a December 11 interview with Fox Newsโ Chris Wallace, Trump said Dakota Access will โstart one way or the otherโ once he takes office, but did not offer any detail beyond that.
Not everyone believes that โelection night changed everything,โ however. Enter Jane Kleeb, Founder and President of the Bold Alliance.
โElection night did nothing to change Big Oil from trampling over property rights of farmers and Sovereign rights of Tribal Nations,โ Kleeb told DeSmog. โFor us in the states, in the proposed pipeline routes, water is everything. Our livelihoods, our families, our communities all rely on clean water.โ
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
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