The Dakota Access Pipeline Has Already Leaked Oil, Just Like People Feared It Would
For nearly two years now, activists, environmentalists, and native peoples have been protesting the construction of the Dakota Access oil pipeline, insisting that the project places sacred land and water at risk of contamination as it snakes past the Standing Rock Sioux tribal lands in South Dakota.
On Wednesday, those fears were given a measure of legitimacy when it was reported that a section of the pipeline had, in fact, already leaked dozens of gallons of crude oil.
According to the Associated Press, some 84 gallons of oil leaked from a pump station in northeast South Dakota in April. The leak happened approximately 100 miles from the Lake Oahe water reservoir, where most of the #NoDAPL protests were focused. While the state’s Department of Environment and Natural Resources did reportedly record the spill in its online database, a representative from the agency told the AP that the relatively small amount of oil spilled, its location, and the fact that there was no immediate major environmental risk did not warrant a dedicated release notifying the public of the leak.