The remarks came in response to allegations that Texas-based Dakota Access developer Energy Transfer Partners made in court documents late yesterday.
The company said there have been "recent coordinated physical attacks along the pipeline that pose threats to life, physical safety and the environment," but did not say who was responsible for those alleged attacks.
Company spokeswoman Vicki Granado and company attorney William Scherman didn't immediately respond to requests today from The Associated Press for more details. Scherman did say in the court documents that ETP still plans to have oil flowing this week through the USD 3.8 billion pipeline that will carry North Dakota crude to a shipping point in Illinois.
In October, Climate Direct Action activists tried to shut valves on pipelines in North Dakota, Minnesota, Montana and Washington to show support for Dakota Access opponents. Other than that, "we have nothing in the works," O'Hara said.
The Red Warrior Society, a pipeline protest group that advocated aggressive tactics such as confrontations with pipeline security and police in North Dakota last year, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment today.
The company's report didn't change the plan of authorities in North Dakota to reopen a stretch of highway that was closed for months due to pipeline protests. Part of state Highway 1806 was shut down in late October after a bridge was damaged by fires during protests.
Authorities on Friday began allowing public traffic with the assistance of pilot cars escorting vehicles over the 9-mile stretch near the site where pipeline opponents camped for months. The camps were cleared out and shut down late last month in advance of spring flooding season.
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