Swedish teen climate activist touring Dakotas reservations
Source: Associated Press
Swedish teen climate activist touring Dakotas reservations
Updated 7:59 pm CDT, Sunday, October 6, 2019
FILE - In this Sept. 27, 2019 file photo, Swedish climate activist and student Greta Thunberg smiles on stage after addressing the Climate Strike in Montreal, Quebec. The teenager who garnered international attention when she scolded world leaders at the United Nations is visiting American Indian reservations in the Dakotas to talk about oil pipelines. Thunberg is appearing at panel discussions on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota Sunday, Oct. 6 and on the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota on Tuesday, Oct. 8. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press via AP)
PINE RIDGE, S.D. (AP) A 16-year-old climate activist who garnered international attention when she scolded world leaders at the United Nations is visiting American Indian reservations in the Dakotas to talk about oil pipelines.
Greta Thunberg appeared Sunday in a youth panel discussion on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. A similar event is planned Tuesday morning on the North Dakota side of the Standing Rock Reservation.
The Lakota People's Law Project says Thunberg is concerned about the proposed path of the Keystone XL pipeline through South Dakota, as well as plans to double oil flowing through the Dakota Access pipeline in North Dakota.
Thunberg traveled to the United States in August on a sailboat to promote her climate change campaign.
Read more: https://www.chron.com/news/us/article/Swedish-teen-climate-activist-to-visit-Dakotas-14496280.php
Kid Berwyn
(14,953 posts)She is an amazing human being.
sandensea
(21,664 posts)A reported 10-gallon spill of liquid gold at the Garden Creek I Gas Processing Plant in 2015 just before the Dakota Access Pipeline controversy could now be renamed as the largest land spill in human history.
The plant, operated by Oklahoma company, ONEOK Partners, reported 10 gallons of condensate or liquid natural gas spilled, but the accident, which occurred over a long duration of time, was underreported, Bill Suess, the spill investigation program manager for North Dakota Department of Environmental Quality, said.
Information leaked to Desmog, and Rolling Stone Magazine, shows an internal memo inside ONEOK expected to find up to 11 million gallons of spilled condensate.
https://hpr1.com/index.php/feature/news/nds-petroleum-spill-could-be-u.s.s-largest-land-spill/