A federal court has ruled that the Enbridgeย Alberta Clipper (Line 67) cross-borderย tar sands pipeline expansion project, permitted covertly and behind closed doors by the Obama Administration, got its greenlight in a legalย manner.ย
The ruling โ made by Michael J. Davis, a President Bill Clinton-appointee โย comes just over a year after several environmental groups brought a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of State for what they said was a violation of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). NEPA calls for robust public hearings and public commenting periods for any major proposed energy infrastructure projects, referred to by some as the โMagna Carta of environmental law.โ
But first the basics: President Barack Obama and the State Department gave Enbridge its initial Alberta Clipper permit in August 2009, during congressional recess. In November 2012, Enbridge requested an expansion of that pipeline from its initial 450,000 barrels per day capacity to 880,000 barrels per day.
Seeing TransCanada‘s sordid experience with Keystone XLย in action, Enbridge decided that a year into the expansion permitting project, it would do what environmental groups have coined a โswitcheroo.โ
That is, they dreamt up the idea to add pump stations on each side of the border to two different pipelines (in name only, but part of the same pipeline system)ย โ Line 3 and Alberta Clipper, respectivelyย โ and avoid having to go through the conventional State Department presidential permit process for border-crossingย projects.
Enbridge then wrote emails and letters to the State Department describing its plans, which high-level officials proceeded to sign off on, without consulting the U.S.ย public.
The public did not learn of this โillegal schemeโ until it was published in the Federal Register in August 2014, though emails show the State Department and Enbridge worked together to permit the pipeline behind the scenes beginning in at least January 2014. Those emails came to light due to a DeSmog investigation, obtained via the administrative record for the now decided upon U.S. District Courtย lawsuit.
Alberta Clipper is one piece of the broader Enbridge-owned multi-part pipeline system that DeSmog has called the โKeystone XL Clone,โ which does what TransCanada’s Keystone Pipeline System does: shuttleย diluted bitumen (โdilbitโ) from Alberta down to U.S. Gulf coast refineries and in part to the global export market.ย ย
Ruling,ย Reaction
Judge Davis’ legal ruling rested on an interesting legal theory, the same one brought forward by Enbridge and the State Department. That is,ย even though the State Department signed off on the scheme, it was not an โagency actionโ and therefore NEPA was not inย play.ย
Citing a mountain of legal cases in which this precedent has held, Davis wrote that โthe overwhelming authority supports a finding that the State Departmentโs actions in this case are Presidential in nature, and thus not subject to judicialย review.โ
Environmental groupsย who brought this case to courtย say an appeal is on the table, though for now they are weighing all of theirย options.ย
โWhile the courts and the State Department sidestep their responsibility to protect our communities, Minnesotans are standing up and resisting Enbridge’s schemes in ever-increasing numbers,โ Andy Pearson of Minnesota’s branch of 350.org said in a pressย release.
โFrom 5,000 people marching in St. Paul this summer to last month’s occupation of an Enbridge office in Duluth, the movement on the ground against this pipeline invasion is growing by the day. We’re disappointed that the courts didnโt step in today, but will continue to fight this expansion and will not beย deterred.โ
Sandpiperย Pipeline
The Alberta Clipper ruling is not the only big legal decision concerning Enbridge as ofย late.
On November 18, North Dakotaย Northeast Central Judicial District Judgeย Debbie Kleven ruled that Enbridge has the authority to condemn the land of James and Krista Botsford to install the proposed Sandpiper Pipelineย under the legal auspices ofย eminent domain. The Botsfords are a couple who haveย madeย national news as of late for conscientiouslyย objecting to having a pipeline carrying North Dakota’s Bakken Shale oil obtained via hydraulic fracturing (โfrackingโ)ย underneath theirย land.
Enbridge will have access to the couple’s land for a 99-yearย period.ย
Image Credit:ย North Dakotaย Northeast Central Judicial Districtย Court
James Botsford told DeSmog he โwill appeal every part of this rulingโ and is currently fundraising for the case on the GoFundMe crowd-sourcing platform.
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Photo Credit: chris kolaczan |ย Shutterstock
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