Keystone XL pipeline
-
Campaigners welcomed Wednesday’s ruling as a victory for tribal rights and environmental protection
-
The oil industry saw its opening and moved with breathtaking speed to take advantage of this moment
-
Plan would help Trump administration advance projects held up over global heating concerns such as the Keystone XL oil pipeline
-
Records seen by the Guardian show law enforcement has called demonstrators possible ‘domestic terrorism’ threats
-
Protesters were characterized as a threat to national security in what one calls an attempt to criminalize their actions
-
State’s highest court rejects attempt to derail project by opponents who want to force developer to reapply for state approval
-
Latest legal skirmish in a long battle between activists and the company building the pipeline, which is also behind Keystone XL
-
District court judge Brian Morris rules Trump administration did not consider environmental consequences before pushing ahead
-
Documents suggest an aggressive response to possible protests against the oil pipeline amid fears of another Standing Rock
-
Martin Lukacs: Canadian government viewed Trump’s election as “positive news” for Keystone XL and energy industry
-
Pipeline plan clears last major regulatory hurdle after vote in Nebraska, but legal challenges and protest likely to follow
-
‘Nebraska is the last hope to stop the Keystone XL pipeline’4:53
-
Part three: The Guardian’s pipeline road trip ends in Nebraska, where Trump has sold the project as a creator of ‘a lot of jobs’, but facts don’t support his claims
-
After Trump’s revival of the Keystone XL pipeline project, a law in South Dakota could ban protests, as many fear a ‘serious threat’ to water7:58
-
Part two: In South Dakota, a law could ban protests amid opposition from Republican ranchers, as many fear a ‘serious threat’ to water
Topics
Biden must be our 'climate president'. He can start by ending pipeline projects