Current:Home > NewsAtlantic Coast Pipeline Faces Civil Rights Complaint After Key Permit Is Blocked -MacroWatch
Atlantic Coast Pipeline Faces Civil Rights Complaint After Key Permit Is Blocked
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 05:13:32
A federal court has invalidated a key permit for the Atlantic Coast pipeline project, a step that could give civil rights advocates more time to build their environmental justice case against the $6 billion project to carry natural gas from West Virginia to North Carolina.
Opponents of the Atlantic Coast pipeline allege the Dominion Energy-led project would have a disproportionate impact on people of color living along its route.
A group of community and statewide advocacy groups in North Carolina, along with the national Friends of the Earth, filed a complaint with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s External Civil Rights Compliance Office on Tuesday asking the agency to overturn North Carolina state permits for the pipeline and for a new environmental justice analysis of it.
On the same day, a three-judge panel in the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals invalidated a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service permit for the pipeline, known as an “incidental take limit.” The judges ruled that that permit, designed to limit the number of threatened or endangered species that could be harmed or killed during the pipeline’s construction and operation, was too vague and could not be enforced.
Dominion Energy said the decision only covered parts of the proposed 600-mile project and that the company will move forward with construction as scheduled.
The community and environmental groups, meanwhile, say state and federal agencies failed to assess disproportionate health impacts the proposed pipeline project would have on minorities as required under the Civil Rights Act.
They assert that an analysis by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission erred in how it compared state, county and local community data in ways that disguised the real discriminatory effect of the route.
Tamara Young-Allen, a spokeswoman for FERC, the agency that conducted the environmental justice assessment, declined to comment saying she can’t discuss matters that are pending before a final decision by the commision.
The commission approved the pipeline in October, but has since received multiple requests from environmental groups and landowners for a rehearing of that decision.
The pipeline’s challengers cite an outside environmental justice assessment completed in March by RTI International, a North Carolina nonprofit, working with local environmental groups that provided input.
“As most of the North Carolina counties along the proposed ACP corridor have communities of color significantly above the state average, this decision greatly minimizes the apparent disproportionality in minorities impacted,” the complaint letter filed on Tuesday stated.
‘Same Strategy Over and Over’
Mary Finley-Brook, a professor of geography and the environment at the University of Richmond, published a study earlier this month in the academic journal Energy Research & Social Science that looked at cases of environmental injustice across the Atlantic Coast pipeline’s route. Finley-Brook said impacts on low-income and minority populations were downplayed by developers and signed off by federal and state regulators all along the pipeline’s route.
The pipeline’s developers took the same approach in North Carolina, she argued, as they took in Buckingham County Virginia. There, they’ve proposed siting a large compressor station to push gas through the line next to a predominantly African American community. “It is the same strategy over and over,” she said.
A 2017 report by Physicians for Social Responsibility found such compressor stations pose significant health risks and have resulted in symptoms “ranging from skin rashes to gastrointestinal, respiratory, neurological and psychological problems.”
The Buckingham County facility, according to the company’s state permit, would release 32 tons of volatile organic compounds and 43 tons of particulate matter, small dust particles linked to respiratory diseases. The proposal is still wending its way through the approvals process.
“For the compressor station, the FERC application said the Buckingham population density was 29.9 people per mile and people of color were less than half,” Finley-Brook said. “Within a mile of the compressor, there are 99 households and 85% are African American.”
Finley’s study drew, in part, on prior research looking at cases of environmental injustice against Native Americans and low-income farmers related to the pipeline. Thirteen percent of those living in close proximity to the pipeline in North Carolina are Native American, in a state where only 1.2 percent of the population is Native American, according to findings first published in the academic journal Science.
When seizing land for the pipeline through a legal tactic known as eminent domain, the Atlantic Coast Pipeline targeted low-income farmers with small land holdings, according to findings first published in North Carolina Central Law Review.
An International Airing
Concerns about the pipeline’s impact on low-income and minority communities had an international airing on Wednesday, when The Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal, a forum focused on human rights violations, heard testimony related to the Atlantic Coast Pipeline and Mountain Valley Pipeline, another gas pipeline facing various legal challenges and protests.
“Both ACP and MVP [Mountain Valley Pipeline] disproportionately target people and places that are majority rural, low-income and majority African American [and] Native American,” Lakshmi Fjord, chair of a local Virginia chapter of the People’s Tribunal, said in a statement.
Virginia’s recently formed Advisory Council on Environmental Justice, an independent body that reports to Governor Ralph Northam, will hold a public meeting in Buckingham County on May 30 to hear residents’ concerns and to make recommendations.
Finley-Brook, a member of the governor’s advisory council, said one priority for her recommendations would be making sure the state has the right expertise to properly evaluate projects like the Atlantic Coast Pipeline.
“We don’t have anybody with our Department of Health that knows anything about public health impacts of compressor stations,” Finley-Brook said. “One of the basic recommendations would be either train somebody who does or hire somebody who does. You can’t have a state with compressor stations if you don’t know what that impact is.”
veryGood! (6476)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Tesla recalling more than 125,000 vehicles to fix seat belt warning system
- Maui Council budgets $300,000 to study impacts of eliminating 7,000 vacation rentals
- Alan Jackson expands Last Call: One More for the Road tour with 10 new shows: See the dates
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Bruhat Soma wins 2024 Scripps National Spelling Bee
- U.S.-made bomb used in Israeli strike on Rafah that killed dozens, munitions experts say
- Jax Taylor Addresses Dating Rumors After Being Spotted With Another Woman Amid Brittany Cartwright Split
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Photos: A visual look at the past seven weeks at Donald Trump’s hush money trial
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Nicole Brown Simpson’s sisters want you to remember how she lived, not how she died
- Imprisoned former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder pleads not guilty to new charges
- Drake has his own solo song on Camila Cabello's new album without her: Here's why
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- 81-year-old man accused of terrorizing California neighborhood for years with slingshot is found dead days after arrest
- Trump Media shares recover after post conviction sell-off
- Donald Trump is convicted of a felony. Here’s how that affects the 2024 presidential race
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Jennie Garth Shares How Body Image Struggles Have Led to Unhealthy Habits
Phone and internet outages plague central and eastern Iowa
Police with batons approach Israel-Hamas war protesters at UC Santa Cruz
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Oil executives imprisoned five years in Venezuela sue former employer Citgo for $400 million
Alabama executes death row inmate Jamie Mills for elderly couple's 2004 murders
U.S.-made bomb used in Israeli strike on Rafah that killed dozens, munitions experts say