Lawsuit: Feds must press pipeline firms on oil spill disaster plans

610 miles of pipe waiting
Fifty out of 610 miles of pipe that will eventually bring North Dakota oil to Wisconsin is stacked in a hay field on Highway 200 east of Lake George, Minn., on Nov. 6, 2014.
John Enger | MPR News

An environmental group is suing the federal government, contending it is giving pipeline owners and operators a free pass on developing plans for dealing with major oil spills.

The suit filed Thursday by the National Wildlife Federation says the federal Oil Pollution Act prohibits operators from handling, storing or transporting oil until their spill response plans get federal approval. The plans are supposed to make sure enough resources are available to contain and remove spilled oil and limit the environmental damage.

The group says the Department of Transportation was ordered to write regulations and review companies' spill response plans 20 years ago but never has.

The department issued rules last week to help prevent oil and gas pipeline accidents. The lawsuit says there still aren't adequate plans for worst-case spills.

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