What the Trump Victory Means for Standing Rock
Jenni
Monet posted Nov 09, 2016 -
YES! Magazine
The Sioux tribe is facing a pro-oil president-elect with personal
investments riding on the completion of the Dakota Access pipeline.
The Dakota Access Pipeline was earlier diverted from the community of
Bismarck and has now has been directly installed two miles above the
Standing Rock tribes water source. The Missouri River is pure here. It
flows from Montana and into the Mississippi. This is the water source
for 10 million people and will affect 10 states drinking water. It
will also flow directly into the ocean when the pipeline bursts because
all oil pipeline eventually burst. True we need our own oil source but
this oil is being shipped to other countries.
Less than 12 hours after Donald Trump walked onto a New York City stage
as the newly elected president, the stock price for Energy Transfer
Equity shot up 15 percent. Among that company’s holdings is Energy
Transfer Partners, operator of the controversial Dakota Access pipeline.
Protesters near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation continue to fight
completion of the $3.8 billion project. But the jump in share price
indicates an immediate pro-energy confidence in Trump.
And that confidence is not unfounded.
In Bismarck, North Dakota, Donald Trump gave a speech in May that would
help secure his seat as America’s 45th president. The candidate was
lagging 30 delegates to become the Republican nominee. His decision to
address oil entrepreneurs in North Dakota was political strategy. At a
petroleum conference, Trump introduced his energy plan for the first
time: more fossil fuels, fewer regulations, and a vow to undo many of
President Obama’s climate initiatives. Trump would meet the required
1,237-delegate threshold to go on and win the presidency, a startling
upset for an outsider who has disrupted the political
establishment.
What a Trump victory may spell for the continued battle over the Dakota
Access pipelineand for indigenous rights, in generalis
alarming.
For starters, President-elect Trump would stand to personally profit from
the project. His campaign energy adviser, Harold Hamm, would also see
gains. Hamm is the CEO of Continental Resources, which has plans to flow
its supply of Bakken fracked crude through the pipeline. With Trump’s
recent victory, Hamm is also on the short list of becoming U.S. energy
secretary.
As Politico reports, Trump is also seriously considering 74-year-old
Forrest Lucas, of oil products company Lucas Oil,
as a top contender for interior secretary, along with “Drill, Baby,
Drill” Sarah Palin.
This political changeover has come at a critical time in the struggle at
Standing Rock.
All sides, for and against the pipeline, have vowed to stand their
ground. The battle to stop the project and protect the Missouri River has
recently intensified, growing into one of the largest indigenous rights
movements in the world.
Last week, construction reached the river. Plans call to bury the
pipeline 92 feet below the river’s surface. The Missouri is the Standing
Rock Sioux tribe’s prime water source; 18 million other people depend on
it downstream. This political changeover has come at a critical
time in the struggle at Standing Rock.
On Tuesday, pipeline operators Energy Transfer Partners announced plans
to advance its project despite earlier calls from the Obama
administration to halt construction. According to a statement released
Wednesday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had recently repeated this
request in the midst of more violence between police and protesters
erupting on lands belonging to the Corps.
“We asked Dakota Access pipeline on Nov. 4 to honor the
administration’s request for a voluntary shut down by stopping work for a
30-day period to allow for de-escalation,” said Colonel John Henderson,
the Army Corps district commander. “Dakota Access did not agree to this
request.”
The U.S. government is reassessing permits and has said it’s looking at
possible rerouting; the pipeline route currently needs to traverse
easements on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lands.
On Tuesday, Energy Transfer said it is “mobilizing horizontal drilling
equipment” for tunneling under Lake Oahe, a basin on the Missouri River,
near where thousands of protesters are camped out to protect the
water.
That the energy company chose Election Day to announce its brazen
defiance of federal appeals is worth mentioninga day when the focus of
most Americans would not be the pipeline, but on the race for the White
House.
“Dakota Access remains confident that it will receive the easement for
these two strips of land adjacent to Lake Oahe in a time frame that will
not result in any significant delay in proceeding with drilling
activities under Lake Oahe,” read a statement from the company.
Energy Transfer noted plans to start traversing the water within two
weeks in an effort to meet its end of the year construction deadlinesa
signal that it has no intention to negotiate, slow down, or
reroute.
“We are concerned over recent statements from DAPL,” said Col.
Henderson. In his remarks, he once again urged the pipeline company
to stop construction and leave the area. “We again ask DAPL to
voluntarily cease operations in this area as their absence will help
reduce these tensions.”
But now that Trump has won the election and has said he would steer
energy policy toward more oil production rather than less, plans to
ignore the Obama administration and advance the pipeline so swiftly
doesn’t seem so brazen at after all. Just prescient.
According to his Public Financial Disclosure Report, Trump disclosed
between $500,000 and $1 million in investments in ETP. He also disclosed
$50,000 to $100,000 in investments in Phillips 66, which would own
one-quarter of the Dakota Access pipeline once complete.
Between now and January 20, 2017, when Trump is officially sworn into
office, it will be up to the Obama administrationthrough its three
agencies, the Department of Justice, the Department of the Interior, and
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineersto deny the permits to Energy Transfer
and Dakota Access, if the pipeline is to be halted.
“In this time of uncertainty, President Obama still has the power to give
our children hope,” said Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Chairman Dave
Archambault II. In a statement today, the tribal leader described the
results of last night’s election this way: “We as a country have so much
work to do.”
The question now becomes: What happens after Jan. 20?
Among Trump’s campaign promises has been a vow to rescind President
Obama’s key climate policies, including reviving construction of the
disrupted Keystone XL pipeline. That pipeline would bring petroleum from
Canada’s oil sands to Gulf Coast refineries. Obama eventually stepped in
and stopped the Keystone, a move widely celebrated for his commitment in
addressing these environmental issues.
But what separates Keystone from Dakota Access are boundaries.
Keystone is an international issue because it crosses into Canada, so the
State Department has authority over the proposal, unlike the Dakota
Access pipeline.
- “In this time of uncertainty, President Obama still has the power to
give our children hope.”
Dakota Access is entirely domestic, beginning in North Dakota and
crossing South Dakota and Iowa until it reaches a plant nearly 1,200
miles away in south central Illinois. The federal government has final
oversight because the pipeline crosses interstate waterways, like the
Missouri River. But even then, only 3 percent of the Dakota Access
pipeline crosses federal lands. It also narrowly avoids falling under
tribal jurisdiction by a half-mile.
The one constant factor delaying the pipeline process is the Standing
Rock Sioux tribe’s assertion of its sovereign right to protect the
interests of its water.
But under a Trump presidency, even this right could be under
attack.
In the final months of his campaign, Native American leaders canceled a
planned meeting with Trump after the then-candidate repeatedly referred
to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) as “Pocahontas,” a jab about her
contested claims of having Cherokee ancestry.
Trump has a history of insulting Native Americans, including tribal
leaders he saw as competition for casino interests on the East Coast.
“They don't look like Indians to me,” Trump once said in a congressional
hearing. Meanwhile, in 2000, Trump was fined $500,000 for financing ads
that portrayed Apache tribal members as criminals in their quest to open
a casino.
“This is like Andrew Jackson’s victory,” quipped Rudy Giuliani, speaking
to MSNBC’s Chris Matthews. The former New York City mayor was jovially
referencing how Trump had appeared to beat the establishment in the way
Jackson did in 1827. “The people are rising up against a government they
find to be dysfunctional,” he said.
But the reference to Jackson could not have been more directly aimed at
Standing Rockand all of Indian Country. Jackson’s presidential legacy
was violently forcing Native peoples from their homelands.
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Jenni Monet wrote this article for
YES! Magazine. Jenni is an
award-winning journalist and tribal member of the Pueblo of Laguna in New
Mexico. She’s also executive producer and host of the podcast Still
Here.
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
http://www.sbpermaculture.org
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