Link here.
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP)
— The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has suspended a nationwide program
used to approve oil and gas pipelines, power lines and other utility
work, spurred by a court ruling that industry representatives warn could
slow or halt numerous infrastructure projects over environmental
concerns.
The directive from Army Corps headquarters, detailed in emails obtained by The Associated Press, comes after a federal court last week threw out a blanket permit that companies and public utilities have used for decades to build projects across streams and wetlands.
The Trump
administration is expected to challenge the ruling in coming days. For
now, officials have put on hold about 360 pending notifications to
entities approving their use of the permit, Army Corps spokesman Doug
Garman said Thursday.
The agency did not provide further details on types of projects or their locations.
Pipeline
and electric utility industry representatives said the effects could be
widespread if the suspension lasts, affecting both construction and
maintenance on potentially thousands of projects. That includes major
pipelines like TC Energy’s Keystone XL crude oil line from Canada to the
U.S. Midwest, the Mountain Valley natural gas pipeline in Virginia and
power lines from wind turbines and generating stations in many parts of
the U.S.
“The
economic consequences to individual projects are hard to overstate,”
said Ben Cowan, a Houston-based attorney with Locke Lord LLP who
represents pipeline and wind energy companies. “It could be fatal to a
number of projects under construction if they are forced to stop work
for an extended period in order to obtain individual permits.”
Wow, are "we" nuts or what? Wow.
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