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Climate activists arrested after shutting down key Canada-US oil pipelines

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Climate-change activist Leonard Higgins turns off the flow of oil from a site targeted on Tuesday. Photo: Facebook/Leonard Higgins
Reuters

Climate-change activists on Tuesday disrupted the flow of millions of barrels of crude from Canada to the United States in rare, coordinated action that targeted several key pipelines simultaneously.

Activists in four states were arrested after they cut padlocks and chains and entered remote flow stations to turn off valves in an attempt to stop crude moving through lines that carry as much as 15 per cent of daily US oil consumption. The group posted videos online showing the early-morning raids.

Protest group Climate Direct Action said the action was in support of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, which has protested the construction of a separate US$3.7 billion pipeline carrying oil from North Dakota to the US Gulf Coast over fears of potential damage to sacred land and water supplies.

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Officials, pipeline companies and experts say the protesters ran the danger of causing environmental damage themselves by shutting down the lines. Unscheduled shutdowns can lead to a build-up of pressure and cause ruptures or leaks, they said.

The activists had studied for months how to execute the shutdowns safely, said Afrin Sopariwala, a spokeswoman for the group.
Activists from Climate Direct Action who took part in a coordinated shutdown of Canada-US oil pipelines on Tuesday. Photo: Climate Direct Action
Activists from Climate Direct Action who took part in a coordinated shutdown of Canada-US oil pipelines on Tuesday. Photo: Climate Direct Action
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“We are acting in response to this catastrophe we are facing,” Sopariwala said, referring to global warming.

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