Resistance against a new Bakken crude pipeline stepped up this week with the arrest of 12 people on Thursday near the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota.
“They’re trying to lay a pipe across our water. They’re trying to poison our future,” said one of the people taking part in the action.
YouTube user UrbanNativeEra posted this video of the event:
The dozen people arrested—who were among roughly 200 protesters—face charges of disorderly conduct or criminal trespass, the Associated Press reports.
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The fossil fuel infrastructure project in question is the roughly 1,100-mile Dakota Access Pipeline, which is slated to transport up to 570,000 barrels a day of crude from the Bakken fields in North Dakota to Patoka, Illinois.
The “mega-pipeline” (it’s nearly the same length as the Keystone XL), as Mother Jones writes Friday, recently received all the regulatory permission it needs to be constructed. Its approval may have been helped by parent company Energy Transfer Partners’ strategy of having the pipeline route avoid federal lands—a lesson learned from TransCanada’s denied pipeline.
As EcoWatch writes, the Dakota Access
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