Politics
Grim Day for Pipelines Shows They’re Almost Impossible to Build
- Court orders shutdown of Dakota Access crude oil pipeline
- Dominion, Duke cancel $8 billion Atlantic Coast gas pipeline
Photographer: Scott Dalton/Bloomberg
This article is for subscribers only.
To be an energy superpower, U.S. oil and natural gas requires a suitably gargantuan pipeline network that stretches for millions of miles. The country’s ability to expand that infrastructure is being tested like never before.
In the span of less than 24 hours, a court ordered the Dakota Access crude oil pipeline to shut down and the developers of the Atlantic Coast gas conduit said they were canceling the project. It was a deluge of bad news for an industry that’s increasingly finding that the mega-projects of the past are no longer feasible in the face of unprecedented opposition to fossil fuels and the infrastructure that supports them.