Current:Home > NewsKeystone XL Pipeline Ruling: Trump Administration Must Release Documents -FutureWise Finance
Keystone XL Pipeline Ruling: Trump Administration Must Release Documents
View
Date:2025-04-13 01:18:08
Stay informed about the latest climate, energy and environmental justice news by email. Sign up for the ICN newsletter.
A federal judge in Montana has ordered the Trump administration to release documents it relied on to approve construction of the Keystone XL pipeline last year, a development that pipeline opponents believe could stymie the controversial project.
Last March, the State Department approved construction of the nearly 1,200-mile pipeline, which would carry crude oil from the tar sands region of Alberta, Canada, to Nebraska and ultimately to refineries on the Gulf Coast. The approval reversed a 2015 decision by the Obama administration, which had blocked the project by refusing to issue a permit for the pipeline to cross the Canadian border.
Environmental groups sued the Trump administration, saying its reversal broke three laws and that it failed to conduct additional, updated environmental reviews before granting approval.
As the lawsuit progressed, the government released only some documents, prompting environmentalists to push for a more complete record—or an explanation of why other documents were being withheld. In January, the plaintiffs told the court that the government “wrongly omitted an unknown number of emails and other internal communications.”
“The government provided a cherry-picked record,” said Jackie Prange, an attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, one of the plaintiffs in the case. “We were asking the government to produce all the documents, or if it wasn’t going to, say which ones and why. Our concern is that there’s a black box here, and the public deserves to know what evidence the Trump administration relied on to approve the pipeline.”
Under the law, the government can withhold certain documents that are deemed “deliberative,” but it has to provide a “privilege log” that explains why they were withheld from the record.
The Trump administration now has until March 21 to release the documents or the privilege log.
Government attorneys had argued it could take years and more than $6 million to review to documents before releasing them, noting that the record contained at least 4.5 million documents. They called the environmental groups’ request a “fishing expedition.” Prange said the government’s estimates were “vastly overblown.”
The Problem of Out-of-Date Documents
A few days after President Donald Trump took office, he issued an executive order to give the pipeline a green light. The project’s developer, TransCanada, renewed its permit request six days after Trump’s inauguration, on Jan. 26, 2017. The State Department granted the permit in March, and TransCanada has said it could begin construction in 2019.
Environmental groups contend that the Trump administration based its decision on old environmental reviews.
“A lot of things that the State Department had relied on had been proven wrong or were out of date,” Prange said. “The Trump administration relied on the same documents that had been prepared in 2014, that the Obama administration looked at and did not approve. They relied on the same problematic documents.”
Among other things, a drop in the price of oil and a surge in domestic production undermined the economic analysis of the old environmental impact statement.
A hearing on the merits of the case—on the environmental groups’ primary contentions that the Trump administration acted illegally—is scheduled for May.
“This decision gives us one more reason to believe this pipeline will never be built,” May Boeve, executive director of the environmental advocacy group 350.org, said in an statement. “The Trump administration’s approval of the Keystone XL pipeline has been nothing but smoke and mirrors.”
A Bid to Undermine Environmental Reviews
The administration, meanwhile, is attempting to make it more difficult for environmental groups to sue under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which requires environmental reviews of major federal actions.
Trump’s recently unveiled infrastructure plan calls for $200 billion in new spending on roads, bridges and other infrastructure over the next decade. A main objective of the plan is to shorten environmental reviews and permitting for proposed projects, as well as the timeframe for challenging permits in the courts.
The plan would limit the NEPA review process to two years and would establish a 150-day statute of limitations for any legal challenge. The current timeframe for legal challenges is six years.
This week, the White House released “The Economic Report of the President,” which also stressed the administration’s desire to skim through the review process.
“For both fuel and power infrastructure, the demand for more transmission capacity in new regions has made issues related to gaining regulatory permission more salient,” the report said.
Environmental groups have said the infrastructure plan would gut the environmental reviews that are at the heart of bedrock environmental laws.
“This is a climate-wrecking fossil fuel infrastructure plan that fast-tracks pipelines at the expense of frontline communities and working people,” Boeve said after the proposal was released. “This flies in the face of everything we know about climate science.”
veryGood! (41)
Related
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Jessica Simpson Proves She's Comfortable In This Skin With Make-Up Free Selfie on 43rd Birthday
- Who Were the Worst Climate Polluters in the US in 2021?
- Biden Administration Quietly Approves Huge Oil Export Project Despite Climate Rhetoric
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Why Keke Palmer Is Telling New Moms to “Do You” After Boyfriend Darius Jackson’s Online Drama
- Q&A: Robert Bullard Led a ‘Huge’ Delegation from Texas to COP27 Climate Talks in Egypt
- Las Vegas just unveiled its new $2.3 billion spherical entertainment venue
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Not your typical army: how the Wagner Group operates
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Traveling over the Fourth of July weekend? So is everyone else
- 8 mistakes to avoid if you're going out in the heat
- Our fireworks show
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- How Asimov's 'Foundation' has inspired economists
- A new pop-up flea market in LA makes space for plus-size thrift shoppers
- Should we invest more in weather forecasting? It may save your life
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Petition Circulators Are Telling California Voters that a Ballot Measure Would Ban New Oil and Gas Wells Near Homes. In Fact, It Would Do the Opposite
Feeling Overwhelmed About Going All-Electric at Home? Here’s How to Get Started
The spectacular femininity of bimbos and 'Barbie'
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Climate Change and Habitat Loss is Driving Some Primates Down From the Trees and Toward an Uncertain Future
On The Global Stage, Jacinda Ardern Was a Climate Champion, But Victories Were Hard to Come by at Home
We spoil 'Barbie'