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The U.S. hopes to build more pipelines for carbon capture. Landowners don't want them

A man stands next to a yellow plastic pole that marks a pipeline underneath
Eric Schmid
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
Kenny Davis stands next to the yellow tag marking where a natural gas pipeline traverses underneath his farm last October in rural Scott County in central Illinois.

SCOTT COUNTY, Ill. 鈥 The pipeline runs right through Kenny Davis鈥 modest central Illinois farm, where he had planned to build a home for him and his wife once he retired from working as an electrical lineman.

Davis鈥 retirement came in 2020, but the new house never did.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 do that now,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e got a pipeline right here.鈥

He points out a roughly 30 foot wide clearing straight through the surrounding forest where the natural gas pipeline runs underneath.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want that gap,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 changed my whole outlook on this farm.鈥

The Midwest has thousands of miles of oil and natural gas pipelines running underneath farmland, forests, and even rivers. And many more pipeline projects are being proposed as part of efforts to lower greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.

President Biden has vowed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 'net zero' by 2050. Lawmakers have supported clean energy projects to help do that, by sequestering CO2 and expanding hydrogen power. That will mean many new pipelines to carry CO2 and hydrogen over thousands of miles.

But the new pipeline proposals face stiff resistance from farmers and landowners who cite past projects that exposed regulatory gaps and left behind considerable damage.

Kenny Davis is eager to share his experience with natural gas company Spire and the harm he said it caused on his property.

A man motions to exposed roots and dirt. Kenny Davis points to the exposed root systems where a creek bank is eroding on his property on Oct. 9, 2023. He said the erosion is a lasting result of pipeline construction on his land in Scott County, Illinois.
Eric Schmid
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
Kenny Davis points to the exposed root systems where a creek bank is eroding on his property last October in rural central Illinois. He said the erosion is a lasting result of pipeline construction on his land in Scott County.

Spire won approval in 2018 to construct a natural gas pipeline through southern Illinois to supply the St. Louis region. The 65-mile route was up and running by 2019, but left a wake of damage on dozens of locals鈥 properties, like Davis鈥檚.

He said he didn鈥檛 have much of a choice as Spire used the power of eminent domain to condemn the part of his property they wanted for the pipeline. And now, nearly five years after construction finished, Davis said there are lasting problems, like how the small creek on his property is now eroding, and flows differently

鈥淭he new creek channel right here, it鈥檚 hitting this bank,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat all is just going to cave in.鈥

And then there are the large chunks of wood buried in the ground. He said the company left behind the wooden platforms they used to support the heavy machinery that installed the pipeline.

鈥淭his is a big issue with all the debris underground,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淵ou can see where it鈥檚 coming up.鈥

Davis鈥 experience is far from unique.

Further south, Ray Sinclair also has leftover wood buried in the fields of his family farm. He adds that the construction changed the slope of his soybean fields, causing water to pool in low areas.

鈥淭his green spot is a wet spot that we were not able to plant. We couldn鈥檛 even drive a tractor through it, it was too muddy,鈥 Sinclair said. 鈥淚t did have frogs in it (last) spring, it was that wet.鈥

Others have lost productivity too, he said, adding that some farmers along the route have told him their yields have been cut in half.

The Illinois Attorney General is now suing Spire over these ongoing damages. Spire disputes the claims and has said it has adequately restored the majority of property it worked on. The company provided a statement saying it was 鈥渞eady and willing to perform the remediation necessary to allow for full restoration,鈥 and that it had reached agreements with the majority of impacted landowners.

As frustrated as Davis, Sinclair and others are with Spire, they say government regulators failed to hold the company accountable.

鈥淭he rules and regulations are there, but that鈥檚 just for looks,鈥 Sinclair said.

Rules like before construction ever happened.

To Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-Illinois) the damage is a wakeup call.

鈥淭he Spire situation has proven how much we need to update pipeline rules,鈥 she said. 鈥淪omebody has to be watching and checking up on what these companies are doing.鈥

Duckworth acknowledges pipelines are a critical part of the country鈥檚 transition away from fossil fuels, and natural gas is a

鈥淲e need to make sure that (pipelines) are operated safely and in a way that does not damage the environment,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd if there is damage that occurs, it has to be remediated.鈥

A pipe sits next to a channel along a hill of exposed dirt. Construction of the Spire STL natural gas pipeline through Kenny Davis鈥 property on April 1, 2019 as part of an Aug. 16, 2023 filing to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Years after construction was completed, Davis says debris from the pipeline is still left behind underground.
Central Land Consulting, LLC
Construction of the Spire STL natural gas pipeline through Kenny Davis鈥 property in April 2019, the image a part of an August 2023 filing to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Years after it was completed, Davis says debris from the pipeline is still left behind underground.

鈥楢 collective choice to go down this path鈥

More pipelines have been proposed and permitted to carry CO2 for sequestration and hydrogen as a replacement for natural gas. Many are from the Inflation Reduction Act.

鈥淭here has been a collective choice to go down this path,鈥 said Tara Righetti, chair of energy and environmental policy at the University of Wyoming. 鈥淧retty much all of the modeling shows that carbon removal to some extent is going to be necessary.鈥

The EPA has created new rules that would with technology to capture CO2, Righetti added. They and other big emitters, like ethanol facilities, chemical and cement plants, will need pipelines to connect to places where captured CO2 can be sequestered, she said.

The captured gas can鈥檛 be pumped underground just anywhere; it takes a certain type of geology. Suitable places are concentrated along the Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast, Midwest and Great Plains, and often not directly next to large polluters.

Righetti explained that this means the current 5,000 miles of operating CO2 pipelines could grow ten times over. There are in Louisiana alone.

She described them as 鈥渞eally long pipeline networks that sort of spider web across (the country),鈥 adding, 鈥淚 think a lot of this initially will be developed in relatively rural areas.鈥

But those projects have been a tough sell in those areas.

Last year for 1,300 miles of CO2 pipelines across the Midwest that would have sequestered carbon in Illinois. And operations of Summit Carbon Solutions鈥 2,000 mile network have been delayed by years after .

A semi-trailer emblazoned with the slogan, 鈥淣o hazardous carbon pipelines,鈥 greets drivers entering the town of Fremont, Iowa, on Highway 23.
Grant Gerlock
/
Iowa Public Radio
A semi-trailer emblazoned with the slogan 鈥淣o hazardous carbon pipelines鈥 greets drivers entering the town of Fremont, Iowa last year. Navigator CO2 Ventures announced in October that it was canceling its multi-state pipeline project, which would have run near the small town.

鈥淲e鈥檙e filling rooms with people and the consensus is just, 鈥楴o. We don鈥檛 want it,鈥欌 said Jared Bossly, a fourth-generation farmer and rancher in northern South Dakota who rejected Summit鈥檚 proposal to build on his property.

Bossly cites nearby farmers who have parts of the Keystone oil pipeline on their property. More than a decade since construction, their fields still aren鈥檛 as productive after the damage, he said.

He said the company told them, 鈥淵ou鈥檒l never even know it鈥檚 there.鈥 But added, 鈥淚鈥檝e seen pictures, you can see right across the crop field exactly where that pipe goes.鈥

Fifth-generation corn, soy and wheat farmer Mark Lapka has similar reasons for his opposition to Summit鈥檚 CO2 pipeline traversing his family farm.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of empty promises,鈥 he said. 鈥淲ith the disturbance of that soil where the pipelines are put in, it will take lifetimes to get that productivity back.鈥

Lapka and Bossly also bristle at the prospect of eminent domain, a process where private property can be condemned and taken by a government entity for projects that the public will benefit from.

鈥淭he intent of pipelines is to deliver a product or commodity to a consumer at a cheaper rate of transportation in order to save them dollars,鈥 Lapka said. 鈥淗ere you had a project that wasn鈥檛 going to be delivering any commodity to a consumer. They were going to be burying it in the ground.鈥

Proponents of CO2 pipelines say they would extend the life of the ethanol industry, which in turn supports corn growers. But Bossly counters that it won鈥檛 directly benefit farmers who would have to give up their land.

鈥淵ou get absolutely nothing from this CO2 thing,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e just going to get this one time check and then it鈥檚 done. How come we don鈥檛 get paid as long as that pipeline is being used?鈥

It鈥檚 a point Righetti raises too, especially since rural landowners will be shouldering more of the risk from these projects.

鈥淗ow does this benefit them?鈥 she said. 鈥淥ther than to the extent that it benefits the general public from the purpose of mitigating climate change.鈥

She argues this infrastructure is necessary for reducing carbon emissions without ceasing use of all fossil fuels, but the rural communities these pipelines cut through should have the opportunity to benefit from the billions of dollars these projects stand to generate.

This story is a product of the , an independent reporting network based at the in partnership with , with major funding from the Walton Family Foundation.

Eric Schmid covers business and economic development for 漏 2024 外网天堂.