Dakota Access Pipeline Route to Change
Dakota Access Pipeline Route to Change
In a stunning and surprise (and perhaps temporary) victory for the water protectors gathered at the Standing Rock protest camp, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced that they will not approve the easement necessary for construction of the hated Dakota Access Pipeline. This decision means that construction of the pipeline will be delayed for months while the Corps undertakes an environmental impact study.This decision came after more than 2000 veterans descended from around the United States to place themselves between the Sioux and other protesters and the violence perpetrated by local police forces. In response to the gathering of veterans, National Guard troops were being deployed to the Standing Rock area. One can easily imagine (at best) awkward and (at worst) tragic interactions between the veterans and the National Guard, some of whom may know each other. Additionally, with winter settling in, the Governor's office considered a blockade and a $1000 fine for anyone bringing supplies into the camp, but later backed down from this decision. The situation at Standing Rock looked impossibly tense in the first days of December, with forces building on both sides.And then, victory! Or is it? The Sioux began their months-long protest with many goals in mind. They were worried about the Dakota Access Pipeline, like all pipelines, eventually leaking or rupturing and contaminating the Missouri River, which is the sole source of water for the Standing Rock reservation. The construction would dig up land they consider sacred, and destroy sites of historic and religious importance. Treaty rights came into play because of the allegedly unceded land across which the work would progress. And because we're all connected on this blue watery marble hurtling through space together, one of the goals was to keep the oil in the ground altogether. Quoting a document that is purportedly the operations order for the veterans joining Standing Rock, "Our intent is to slow construction of the [Dakota Access Pipeline] and draw attention to both the injustice committed there and the danger to our families posed by an increase in greenhouse gas emissions."While any rerouting of the pipeline is a victory for the Standing Rock Sioux, and any delay in its construction is a momentary reprieve from additional carbon being released into our atmosphere as if it were an open sewer, this is, in a way, a zero-sum game. The Dakota Access Pipeline project is not being shelved, merely rearranged, especially with an incoming Trump administration that seems likely to fast-track construction. It will still go through someone else's land and someone else's water, especially if the unlucky people along the next proposed route are unable to mount a spirited defense that plays to guilt over our collective cultural debt to the First Nations, gains international media attention, and attracts thousands of war veterans to flock to their aid.
Protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline. Photo by Fibonacci Blue, via Flickr.
Sources:
N. Dakota officials back away from blockade plans for Standing Rock camp
Standing Rock: US veterans join North Dakota protests
Veterans Offer Relief To Protesters Of Dakota Access Pipeline
US Army Corp of Engineers: Dakota Pipeline to be re-routed
Army will deny easement, halting work on Dakota Access Pipeline
Veterans Stand for Standing Rock Operations Order
The EPA Has a New Tool For Mapping Where Pollution and Poverty Intersect
Proposed South La. pipeline linked to Dakota pipeline
Feds Approve NEXUS Pipeline, Which Will Run Through Northeast Ohio
McConnell asks Trump to approve Keystone pipeline
Major Pipeline Projects Pending (Onshore)
Energy Transfer Partners and Sunoco Logistics Partners Respond to the Statement from the Department of the Army
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.