Since MexicoĀ privatizedĀ its oil and gas resources in 2013, border-crossing pipelines including thoseĀ owned by Sempra Energy and TransCanada have come under intense scrutiny and legalĀ challenges, particularly from IndigenousĀ peoples.
Opening up the spigot forĀ U.S.Ā companies to sell oil and gas into Mexico was aĀ top priority for the Obama State DepartmentĀ under HillaryĀ Clinton.
Mexico is now facing its own Standing Rock-like moment as the Yaqui Tribe challenges Sempra Energy’sĀ Agua Prieta pipeline between Arizona and the Mexican state of Senora. The Yaquis in the village of Loma de BacumĀ claim that the Mexican government has failed to consult with them adequately, as required by MexicanĀ law.
IndigenousĀ Consultations
Under Mexico’s new legal approach to energy, pipeline project permits require consultations with Indigenous peoples living along pipeline routes. (In addition, Mexico supported the adoption of the United Nations Declaration on theĀ Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which includes the principle of āfree, prior and informed consentā from Indigenous peoples on projects affecting them ā something Canada currently is grappling withĀ asĀ well.)
It was a similar lack ofĀ indigenous consultation which theĀ Standing Rock Sioux Tribe said was the impetus for lawsuits and the months-long uprisingĀ against the Dakota Access pipelineĀ near the tribe’s reservation in Cannon Ball, North Dakota, in late 2016. Now, according to Bloomberg and Mexican reporterĀ Gema Villela Valenzuela for the Spanish language publicationĀ Cimacnoticias, history is repeating itself in the village of Loma de Bacum in northwestĀ Mexico.
Agua Prieta, slated to cross theĀ Yaqui River, was given the OK byĀ seven of eight Yaqui tribal communities. But theĀ Yaquis based inĀ Loma de Bacum have come out against the pipeline passing through their land, even goingĀ as far as chopping out a 25 foot section of pipe built acrossĀ it.
āThe Yaquis of Loma de Bacum say they were asked by community authorities in 2015 if they wanted a 9-mile tract of the pipeline running through their farmland ā and said no. Construction went ahead anyway,ā Bloomberg reported in a December 2017 story. āThe project is now in a legal limbo. Ienova, the Sempra unit that operates the pipeline, is awaiting a judicial ruling that could allow them to go in and repair it ā or require a costlierĀ re-route.ā
As the legal case plays out in the Supreme Court of Justice in Mexico, disagreements over the pipeline and its construction in Loma de Bacum have torn the community apart and even led to violence, according toĀ Cimacnoticias.
Construction of the pipeline āhas generated violence ranging from clashes between the community members themselves, to threats to Yaqui leaders and women of the same ethnic group, defenders of the Human Rights of indigenous peoples and of the land,ā reported Cimacnoticias, according to a Spanish-to-English translation of itsĀ October 2016Ā story.
āThey explained that there have been car fires and fights that have ended in homicide. Some women in the community have had to stay in places they consider safe, on the recommendation of the Yaquis authorities of the town of BĆ”cum, because they have received threats after opposingĀ signing the collective permit for the construction of theĀ pipeline.ā
TransCanada’s Troubles Cross AnotherĀ Border
While best known for the Canada-to-U.S.Ā Keystone XL pipeline and the years-long fight to build thatĀ proposedĀ tar sands line, the Alberta-based TransCanada has alsoĀ faced permitting issues in Mexico for its proposed U.S.-to-Mexico gasĀ pipelines.
According to a December 2017 story published in Natural Gas Intelligence, TransCanada’s proposedĀ Tuxpan-Tula pipeline is facing opposition from the indigenous Otomi community living in theĀ Mexican state of Puebla. With Tuxpan-Tula, TransCanada hopes to send natural gas from Texas to MexicoĀ via an underwater pipeline named theĀ Sur de Texas-Tuxpan pipelineĀ into the western part of theĀ country.
TheĀ Otomi community recently won a successful bid in Mexican district court to stopĀ construction ofĀ Tuxpan-Tula.
āAt a recent hearing on an indoor soccer court at the foot of Cerro del Brujo, or Shaman’s Hill, in the southern Mexican state of Puebla, a district judge sided with an indigenous community and ordered constructionā of the pipeline to halt, Natural Gas Intelligence reported. ā[T]he court made the order in response to pleas from the local Otomi indigenous community, which claims that the construction would disturb sacredĀ ground.ā
Energy sector privatization in Mexico, decried by the country’s left-wing political parties and leadingĀ 2018 presidentialĀ contender AndrĆ©s Manuel López Obrador, has actually opened up the sort ofĀ legal opportunities that theĀ Otomi have pursuedĀ inĀ court.
āWhat is new in Mexico is the requirement that indigenous communities should be consulted,ā Ramses Pech, CEO of the energy analysis group Caraiva y Asociados, told Natural Gas Intelligence. āThat kind of consultation has long been a part of any project in the U.S. and other countries, but not so here. It was obviously needed in Mexico, too, but it has added to the complexities of the Mexican legal system in areas such as land and rights ofĀ way.ā
In the U.S., the tribal consultation process is governed by the National Historic Preservation Act’s Section 106. That law gave the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe standing to sueĀ U.S. government agencies, though ultimately unsuccessfully, for what the tribe alleged were violations which took place during the inter-agency permittingĀ process.
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