Skip to Content Facebook Feature Image

What to know about Greenpeace and the oil pipeline lawsuit that threatens its future

News

What to know about Greenpeace and the oil pipeline lawsuit that threatens its future
News

News

What to know about Greenpeace and the oil pipeline lawsuit that threatens its future

2026-02-27 06:53 Last Updated At:07:00

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Greenpeace is fighting for its life in North Dakota's court system, where a judge has decided to order the environmental group to pay an expected $345 million to an energy company whose Dakota Access oil pipeline construction drew protests nearly a decade ago.

A jury last year found three Greenpeace entities liable for numerous claims and awarded more than $660 million to Energy Transfer in damages, which Judge James Gion cut nearly in half. Once the order he promised Tuesday is formally entered, both sides are expected to appeal to the North Dakota Supreme Court.

The $64 billion, Dallas-based energy conglomerate, which owns and operates thousands of miles (kilometers) of pipelines in 44 states, has objected to the halving of its award. Greenpeace USA has reported cash and assets nowhere near such hefty damages.

“We will be requesting a new trial and, failing that, will appeal the judgment to the Supreme Court of North Dakota, where Greenpeace International and the US Greenpeace entities have solid arguments for the dismissal of all legal claims against us,” Greenpeace International General Counsel Kristin Casper said Thursday.

Netherlands-based Greenpeace International, Greenpeace USA and funding arm Greenpeace Fund Inc. have said they will never stop working to protect the planet.

With footprints in more than 55 countries, Greenpeace calls itself “a global network of independent campaigning organizations that use peaceful protest and creative confrontation to expose global environmental problems and promote solutions that are essential to a green, just, and joyful future.”

Founded in 1971 in Canada by environmental activists seeking to stop nuclear weapons testing in Alaska's Aleutian archipelago, the group sailed a ship to “bear witness” to a test in a Quaker protest tradition.

They were intercepted by the Coast Guard, but it became a win when the U.S. stopped tests on the island. Their name, according to the group's website, was coined when someone left a meeting holding up two fingers and saying “Peace!” to which Canadian ecologist Bill Darnell said, “Let's make it a Green Peace.”

Greenpeace activists have climbed bridges to hang banners and confronted whaling boats at sea. Three ships sail the world to advance the group’s causes.

Greenpeace members scaled a chemical plant’s smokestack to protest toxic pollution in 1981, and occupied a North Sea oil platform in 1995. They unfurled a banner reading “Resist” from a crane near the White House in 2017, days after President Donald Trump took action to restart Dakota Access construction. And in 2023, they covered the country estate of then-British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in black fabric to protest new oil and gas drilling.

But it was the protests in North Dakota in support of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe that mired the groups in legal trouble.

Plans for the multibillion-dollar Dakota Access Pipeline that now moves oil through four Midwestern states drew widespread opposition after complaints from the tribe, whose reservation is downstream from the pipeline's Missouri River crossing. The tribe has long said the pipeline threatens its water supply.

The tribe's protest drew thousands of supporters, who camped in the area for months while trying to block construction. Hundreds of arrests resulted from the sometimes-chaotic protests in 2016 and 2017.

An attorney for Energy Transfer, Trey Cox, said Greenpeace exploited a small, disorganized, local issue to promote its agenda. He called the group “master manipulators” and “deceptive to the core.” He accused Greenpeace of paying professional protesters, organizing protester trainings, sharing intelligence of the pipeline route and even sending lockboxes so that demonstrators could attach themselves to equipment.

The Greenpeace groups said there was no evidence to those claims and that they had little or no involvement in the protests. They called the litigation lawfare, intended to silence activists and critics.

But the jury found Greenpeace USA liable on all counts, including defamation, conspiracy, trespass, nuisance and tortious interference. The other two entities were found liable for some of the claims.

Leaders and attorneys for several Greenpeace entities listen to a reporter's question after a jury's verdict at the Morton County Courthouse in Mandan, N.D., Wednesday, March 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Jack Dura)

Leaders and attorneys for several Greenpeace entities listen to a reporter's question after a jury's verdict at the Morton County Courthouse in Mandan, N.D., Wednesday, March 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Jack Dura)

FILE - In this Nov. 2, 2016 file photo, protesters demonstrating against the expansion of the Dakota Access Pipeline wade in cold creek waters confronting local police as remnants of pepper spray waft over the crowd near Cannon Ball, N.D. (AP Photo/John L. Mone, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 2, 2016 file photo, protesters demonstrating against the expansion of the Dakota Access Pipeline wade in cold creek waters confronting local police as remnants of pepper spray waft over the crowd near Cannon Ball, N.D. (AP Photo/John L. Mone, File)

FILE 0 In this Friday Sept. 28, 2018 photo, the Greenpeace flagship the Rainbow Warrior is docked in Wellington, New Zealand. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

FILE 0 In this Friday Sept. 28, 2018 photo, the Greenpeace flagship the Rainbow Warrior is docked in Wellington, New Zealand. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — A 27-year-old man was arrested Thursday after New York City police said officers were hurt when they were pelted with snow and ice during a massive snowball fight in Washington Square Park this week.

The man, Gusmane Coulibaly, has been charged with obstructing governmental administration, a misdemeanor, and harassment, a non-criminal violation, according to online court records. Police had arrested Coulibaly on a charge of assaulting a police officer, a felony, but prosecutors declined to pursue that.

He was expected to appear in court Thursday evening.

The arrest came after Monday's snowball fight, which appeared to be organized by social media content producers, caused a chaotic scene as a large crowd amassed at the popular park to wing snowballs at each other during a winter storm.

Police said officers arrived at the park after a 911 call about a disorderly group there. A video shows two officers getting bombarded by snowballs as a rowdy crowd yells and films with their phones. The officers shoved at least two people to the ground as they paced a walkway in the park while getting hit from all directions by snowballs.

The department said multiple officers were hit in the face with snowballs, and a spokesperson for the union has said two police officers were treated at a nearby hospital for face, head and neck injuries.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a Democrat, played down the fracas as a “snowball fight that got out of hand” and suggested he did not think criminal charges were warranted.

The city's police department has pursued the matter, releasing images of four people it said it was searching for. Jessica Tisch, the police commissioner, has called the snowball fight “disgraceful” and “criminal.”

In this photo taken from video, people throw and duck snowballs during a snowball fight at Washington Square Park, Monday, February. 23, 2026 in New York. (AP Photo/David R. Martin)

In this photo taken from video, people throw and duck snowballs during a snowball fight at Washington Square Park, Monday, February. 23, 2026 in New York. (AP Photo/David R. Martin)

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks during a news conference in Morningside Heights in New York, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks during a news conference in Morningside Heights in New York, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Ferries pass Brooklyn Bridge Park along the East River, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Ferries pass Brooklyn Bridge Park along the East River, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Recommended Articles