We have a chance to shut down the pipeline for good, but only if we stand together to make it happen.
John,
Indigenous communities and allies across the country are standing up and speaking out to shut down the Dakota Access Pipeline. And I wanted to make sure you had an opportunity to take action and amplify the call to shut down the pipeline.
Pipelines are not the answer to our energy needs. Fossil fuel extraction, production and infrastructure directly threaten our air, water and clean energy future. In order to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, we need to keep fossil fuels in the ground.
And that means shutting down the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Thomas Meyer
National Organizing Manager
Food & Water Watch
John,
The Army Corp of Engineers said it will allow the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) to continue operating despite the fact it is dong so in violation of a court order requiring the Army Corps of Engineers to conduct a long-overdue environmental review on the pipeline.
The Dakota Access Pipeline is threatening the drinking water and sacred land of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and other Indigenous peoples. President Biden needs to use his authority to shut down the pipeline immediately.
This environmental review should have been done years before the pipeline was allowed to move forward, but Big Oil and its enablers rigged the process. Indigenous and frontline organizers have been fighting this pipeline since 2014, and Food & Water Watch and coalition partner organizations have been working to support them.
Before leaving office, thanks to the incredible organizing of water protectors, President Obama rejected the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), a decision which was quickly reversed by Trump.
We now have a chance to shut down the pipeline for good, but only if we work together to make it happen.
The Dakota Access Pipeline has destroyed farms and communities along the 1,000-mile-plus route — through the Dakotas and into Iowa and Illinois. Indigenous communities and allies across the country are standing up and speaking out to shut down the Dakota Access Pipeline and address the egregious violations of eminent domain used to build it.
The 2016 protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline brought together over 15,000 people on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota. They staged a peaceful, months-long protest in an effort to prevent the pipeline from being built. The pipeline company’s paid security unleashed heavy-handed tactics on the peaceful demonstrators, including aerial surveillance and attacks with pepper spray and dogs.
It was the ultimate demonstration that Big Oil corporations will do anything to protect their bottom line. Big Oil & Gas doesn’t care about the environment or who it harms — it’s happy to leave communities to struggle with the spills, explosions, pollution and the climate impacts left behind by its work.
Pipelines like DAPL are not the answer to our energy needs. Fossil fuel extraction, production and infrastructure directly threaten our air, water and clean energy future. In order to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, we need to keep fossil fuels in the ground.
And that means shutting down the Dakota Access Pipeline.
At Food & Water Watch, we believe that everyone deserves clean drinking water, clean air and a livable climate. That's why we’re working across the country to take on the fossil fuel industry. Add your voice to the fight!
Wenonah Hauter
Founder and Executive Director
Food & Water Watch
Food & Water Watch and its affiliated organization, Food & Water Action, are advocacy groups with a common mission to protect our food, water and climate. This email was sent to [email protected] - and we're glad you got it, because it's one of the most important ways you can reclaim political power, hold elected officials accountable and resist corporate control.