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Greenpeace to appeal $660 million N.D. verdict

By Andy Balaskovitz

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This roundup of energy news headlines comes from our Midwest Energy News newsletter. Sign up to get it in your inbox each morning.

PIPELINES

  • Greenpeace says it will appeal a North Dakota jury’s decision that it must pay a fossil fuel company more than $660 million in damages for its role in supporting protests against the Dakota Access pipeline. (Associated Press)

  • Legal experts say the verdict could have a chilling effect on public protest and free speech, but also that Greenpeace has a good case for an appeal, which could eventually make it to the U.S. Supreme Court. (E&E News)

  • A federal appeals court considers whether it should stay involved in a lawsuit over Michigan’s Line 5 pipeline or leave the matter to a state court. (E&E News)

CLEAN ENERGY

  • Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison files a lawsuit with other states against the U.S. EPA and Citibank accusing them of illegally withholding funds from state green bank programs. (Star Tribune)

POWER PLANTS

  • The Ohio Senate unanimously passes legislation that would eliminate subsidies for coal-fired power plants but fast-track approval of new power plants, pipelines and transmission projects. (Ohio Capital Journal)

  • Michigan environmental advocates warn that President Trump’s effort to roll back pollution regulations on coal-fired power plants threatens to increase asthma, heart attacks and premature deaths. (MLive)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES

  • Michigan utility regulators say utilities can’t stop residents from using electric vehicle batteries for backup power during power outages. (MLive)

  • Hundreds turn out for a demonstration at a suburban Chicago Tesla dealership against CEO Elon Musk’s dismantling of federal agencies. (Chicago Tribune)

UTILITIES

  • Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe has about a week to act on sweeping legislation that would let utilities charge ratepayers for construction costs before projects are complete and also make it harder to retire power plants. (KY3)

GRID

  • Midwest grid operator MISO asks federal regulators for permission to fast-track certain generation projects to avoid a looming reliability threat. (E&E News)

  • The Department of Energy seeks public input on a planned electric transmission corridor that would pass through parts of Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, and five tribal reservations. (News Channel Nebraska)

FOSSIL FUELS

  • A propane leak at a major oil refinery in Minnesota prompts evacuations and the temporary shutdown of a highway but no reported injuries. (Star Tribune)

BIOFUELS

  • Ethanol boosters note the irony of South Dakota Gov. Larry Rhoden’s Open for Opportunity” tour a week after he signed a bill they say will make it difficult or impossible to build carbon capture pipelines in the state. (SD Searchlight)

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