Mary Annette Pember: Ohio feels just a little taste of Standing Rock


A spill of drilling fluids in Ohio has turned wetlands near the Tuscarawas River into a muddy mess. According to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, construction crews kept working even as 2 million gallons covered 6.5 acres in Stark County. Photo: Ohio Environmental Protection Agency

The company behind the controversial Dakota Access Pipeline is under fire in Ohio for spilling millions of gallons of drilling fluid into wetlands in Ohio. Independent journalist Mary Annette Pember reports on the latest crisis involving Energy Transfer Partners, a billion-dollar company that's balking at $431,000 in fines:
Ohioans are experiencing a little taste of Standing Rock, right at home. Energy Transfer Partners (ETP), the Texas company behind the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) project in North Dakota, has spilled about two million of gallons of drilling materials in two separate accidents into two of Ohio’s few remaining wetlands in a rush to complete its Rover natural gas pipeline.

The accidents occurred on April 13 and 14 as workers employed the same drilling technique used to bore beneath the Missouri River to place pipeline for the DAPL. According to the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, the spill covered about 500,000 square feet and was caused by pressure during drilling. Incidents such as these are what fuel pipeline resistance, as environmentalists and tribal members pointed out.

“Energy Transfer Partners has dumped millions of gallons of a milkshake-like substance into pristine wetlands,” said Jenn Miller, director of the Sierra Club of Ohio. “This will have massive impacts on the plant, fish and amphibian species there.”

One-third of Ohio’s endangered species rely on wetlands for habitat and survival, Miller said.

Read More on the Story:
Mary Annette Pember: ETP Spills Two Million Gallons of Drilling Material in Ohio (Indian Country Today 5/11)

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