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81 Ohio St. L.J. 349 (2020)
Planning for Failure: Pipelines, Risk, and the Energy Revolution

handle is hein.journals/ohslj81 and id is 363 raw text is: 








                      Planning for Failure:
      Pipelines, Risk, and the Energy Revolution

                              SARA  GOSMAN*

    In 2014, as production  soared in North  Dakota's oil fields, Energy
    Transfer Partners proposed  a  large pipeline to transport the oil to
    market. The very name  of the project Dakota  Access   conveyed  the
    company's  optimistic vision of a needed link between the prolific oil
    fields and the rest of the country. The vast scale of the pipeline project
    was matched  only by the intensity of the opposition to the route. A bitter
    controversy erupted at Standing Rock over the risk of a catastrophic oil
    spill. Tribal members and  environmentalists from across  the nation
    united to protest the company's decision to site the pipeline underneath
    a lake that serves as the sole source of drinking water for local tribes.
    The  company   defended  the  safety of its pipeline and  ultimately
    prevailed. Dakota  Access  was  completed  in 2017.  Since it began
    operation, it has leaked eight times.

    One  would   expect risk governance   to take  a more   preventative
    approach  to risk, as the potential for catastrophic harm increases and
    the ability to predict an accident decreases. But projects such as Dakota
    Access raise troubling questions about the current system governing the
    risks of  energy   pipelines. Why   are  pipelines  being  sited  in
    environmentally sensitive and densely populated areas? To what extent
    does the system  address the long-term  risks of spills and releases?
    These questions are more important  than ever before, as the domestic
    revolution in oil and gas production fundamentally reshapes pipeline
    networks and the geographic and political landscape of risk.

    This Article seeks answers by examining  the laws governing  energy
    pipelines through the lens of risk. The analysis reveals a critical flaw in
    risk governance:  the risks associated with siting a pipeline are
    treated separately from the long-term  safety of the pipeline. This
    formal legal distinction has a substantial practical effect on the risk
    landscape. By failing to consider the risks of an accident in the decision
    of where to locate a pipeline that is, by failing to plan for failure the
    system allows energy pipelines to be sited near people and sensitive
    ecosystems. This in turn leads to more accidents in vulnerable areas



    * Associate Professor of Law, University of Arkansas School of Law Fayetteville.
The author wishes to thank her colleagues and the many faculty who gave helpful feedback
during presentations at the Colloquium on Environmental Scholarship at Vermont Law
School, the Works in Progress Symposium at the University of Colorado School of Law, and
the Southeastern Association of Law Schools Conference. The author also wishes to thank
Tara Righetti for her response to the Article and for her insights on risk governance solutions.

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