They
are among the nation’s most significant infrastructure projects: More
than 9,000 miles of oil and gas pipelines in the United States are
currently being built or expanded, and another 12,500 miles have been
approved or announced — together, almost enough to circle the Earth. Now,
however, pipeline projects like these are being challenged as never
before as protests spread, economics shift, environmentalists mount
increasingly sophisticated legal attacks and more states seek to reduce
their use of fossil fuels to address climate change. On
Monday, a federal judge ruled that the Dakota Access Pipeline, an oil
route from North Dakota to Illinois that has triggered intense protests
from Native American groups, must shut down pending a new environmental review. That same day, the Supreme Court rejected a request by the Trump administration to allow construction
of the long-delayed Keystone XL oil pipeline, which would carry crude
from Canada to Nebraska and has faced challenges by environmentalists
for nearly a decade. The day before, two of the nation’s largest utilities announced they had canceled the Atlantic Coast Pipeline,
which would have transported natural gas across the Appalachian Trail
and into Virginia and North Carolina, after environmental lawsuits and
delays had increased the estimated price tag of the project to $8
billion from $5 billion. And earlier this year, New York State, which is
aiming to drastically reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, blocked two different proposed natural gas lines into the state by withholding water permits. The
roughly 3,000 miles of affected pipelines represent just a fraction of
the planned build-out nationwide. Still, the setbacks underscore the
increasing obstacles that pipeline construction faces, particularly in
regions like the Northeast where local governments have pushed for a
quicker transition to renewable energy. Many of the biggest remaining
pipeline projects are in fossil-fuel-friendly states along the Gulf
Coast, and even a few there — like the Permian Highway Pipeline in Texas
— are now facing backlash...MORE
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