Pipelines/flowlines/risers

UPDATE: Appeals Court Stay Allows DAPL To Operate Temporarily

Energy Transfer pursued the stay and expedited appeal after its emergency request for a stay was denied by the US District Court for the District of Columbia.

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US District Court of District of Columbia

The Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) will continue operating after a US appeals court temporarily blocked a US district court order to shut down and empty the pipeline. The US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia issued a stay for the 570,000 B/D pipeline to give the court enough opportunity to consider the emergency motion for the stay.

The appeals court gave the plaintiffs Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and others until 20 August to file a joint response to the emergency motion for a stay and the court-ordered stay. DAPL parent company Energy Transfer has until 23 July to respond.

Energy Transfer’s emergency request for a stay to shut down the 570,000 B/D pipeline was denied on 8 July. The company’s Dakota Access unit filed the emergency request after the US District Court for the District of Columbia ruled on the matter 6 July

Energy Transfer said it believed the ruling was not supported by the law or the facts of the case and the judge in the case exceeded his authority in ordering the shutdown. 

The company said that if a stay was not granted, it would pursue a stay and expedited appeal with the Court of Appeals

“The economic implications of the judge’s order are too big to ignore, and we will do all we can to ensure its continued operation,” the company said in a press release. “Billions of dollars in tax and royalty revenue will be lost by state, local, and tribal governments in North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Illinois.”

Energy Transfer was ordered to shut down the DAPL and remove oil from the pipeline by 5 August. The 1,172-mile pipeline, which transports crude oil from the Bakken/Three Forks production area in North Dakota to Patoka, Illinois, will be shut pending further environmental review.

The US District Court ruled in favor of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, finding that the US Army Corps of Engineers violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) when it granted an easement to Energy Transfer’s Dakota Access to construct and operate a segment of that oil pipeline running beneath Lake Oahe, a large reservoir lying behind a dam on the Missouri River and stretching between North and South Dakota.

The court said this was because the Corps failed to produce a full environmental impact statement (EIS) as ordered on 25 March.

The court added a “clear precedent favoring vacatur during such a remand coupled with the seriousness of the Corps’ deficiencies outweighs the negative effects of halting the oil flow for the 13 months that the Corps believes the creation of an EIS will take.”

Energy Transfer has not commented on the ruling, but a coalition of 14 state attorneys said in May that a shutdown of the pipeline would hurt farmers and increase environmental risks if railways are forced to take on more oil shipments.

According to a Reuters story, on 2 July, the company invoked force majeure, a declaration normally used in times of war or natural disaster, to prevent oil firms from walking away from a proposed expansion of DAPL.

The DAPL website says it has not affected groundwater in any of the four states through which the pipeline passes since going into service in June 2017. The company also said the pipeline does not encroach or cross any land owned by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and is entirely underground and crosses under Lake Oahe at a minimum depth of 95 ft below the bottom of the riverbed.

In August 2018, the Corps completed more than a year of additional study of the pipeline, saying the work substantiated its earlier determination that the pipeline poses no significant environmental threats.