For Immediate Release, December 6, 2016 
            Contact: Randi Spivak, (310) 779-4894, [email protected] 
            Analysis:  North Dakota Pipelines Average Four Spills Per Year;  
            3 Million Gallons Spilled in  Past 21 Years 
Dakota Access Pipeline Reroute Should  Not Endanger Indigenous Lands, Communities or Climate 
            WASHINGTON—  Existing pipelines in North Dakota have spilled crude oil and other hazardous  liquids at least 85 times since 1996, according to an analysis released today  by the Center for Biological Diversity. These 85 spills — an average of four a year — caused more  than $40 million in property damage, according to the data compiled from the  U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety  Administration. 
            
              
                
                  
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                    | Hazardous liquid pipeline spills in North Dakota (1996 - present). Map by Kara Clauser, Center for Biological Diversity. | 
                   
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            The  analysis follows Sunday’s decision by the Obama  administration not to grant the Dakota Access pipeline an easement for construction  under Lake Oahe. After months of peaceful protests led by the Standing Rock  Sioux tribe, the Army Corps of Engineers will undertake a review of alternate  routes for the pipeline. 
            “Pipeline  leaks are common and incredibly dangerous, and the Dakota Access pipeline will threaten every community it cuts through,”  said the Center's Randi Spivak. “This pipeline wasn’t considered safe for the residents  of Bismarck. It is equally unsafe for the water supply of the Standing Rock  Sioux. The Army Corps should not be putting anyone’s water supply at risk.”  
            Energy  Transfer Partners, the conglomerate behind the controversial Dakota Access project,  has a questionable safety record. The company has been responsible for 29  pipeline safety incidents since 2006, in which 9,555 barrels of hazardous  liquids were spilled.  
            The  standoff over the Dakota Access pipeline has united indigenous people across  the globe in an unprecedented show of solidarity; thousands have come to show  their support. In response local police have militarized the situation, firing  rubber bullets and showering protesters with water in freezing temperatures.  
            A  2013 study reveals a deeply troubling history  of pipeline accidents in the United States. This independent analysis of  federal records found that since 1986, oil and gas pipeline leaks, spills and  other safety incidents have resulted in nearly $7 billion in damages, more than  2,000 injuries and more than 500 deaths. 
            A  time-lapse video documents every “significant  pipeline” incident in the continental United States — along with their human  and financial costs — from 1986 through May 2013. On average one significant  pipeline incident occurred in the country every 30 hours, according to the  data. 
            “We  expect the Corps to conduct a full oil-spill risk analysis for every river  crossing along the entire route of the Dakota Access project," Spivak  said. “Spills are a fact of life when pipelines fail — and that puts water,  wildlife and people directly in harm’s way.”   
            The Center for Biological Diversity is  a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.1 million  members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species  and wild places. 
      
            
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