News

ordering Greenpeace to pay $660 million in damages for malicious interference with the Dakota Access Pipeline, the organization has declared that companies such as the African Energy Chamber utilize ...
Thousands traveled to south-central North Dakota to protest the construction of the oil pipeline underneath the Missouri ...
SLAPP suits are civil actions filed—often by corporations—against activists, journalists or NGOs in an effort to burden them ...
A federal judge has rejected a request to broadly expand the number of people who would benefit from any potential money ...
Lucy Biggers built a sizable following as a “sustainability influencer,” and like many young people she was wracked with ...
A state official briefed regulators Thursday on two separate underground pipelines that companies plan to build across ...
A North Dakota jury awarded $667 million in damages to Energy Transfer, the company that runs the Dakota Access Pipeline, after finding Greenpeace liable in a high-stakes defamation case.
The environmental group, battling a multimillion-dollar lawsuit over protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline, told the North Dakota Supreme Court it can’t get a fair trial.
Though in operation since 2016, the Dakota Access Pipeline, which crosses Iowa, is still a target of legal action by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe ...
Since 2017, the more than 1,000-mile pipeline — also known as DAPL — has safely transported more than 1.4 billion barrels of oil, the company wrote. “Dakota Access remains willing to ...
The review notes that the Dakota Access pipeline is buried at least 95 feet below the lake, is built to higher-than-required standards and has the "best epoxy coating available" to prevent corrosion.