The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to take up an environmental challenge to a proposed bond-financed crude oil-transporting railway in Utah.
The Seven County Infrastructure Coalition, a Utah public entity that is spearheading the Uinta Basin Railway project, filed a petition in March asking the high court to review a portion of an August 2023 U.S. Appeals Court ruling that found the Federal Surface Transportation Board
The Center for Biological Diversity, which along with Colorado’s Eagle County sued the federal agency in 2022 over its approval, said the review will focus on the agency’s failure to analyze the project’s upstream drilling impacts on wildlife and vegetation and downstream refining impacts on Gulf Coast communities.
“The court will not review several other legal violations that the lower court found,” the environmental group said in a statement. “Those legal defects will prevent the project from moving forward regardless of how the Supreme Court ultimately rules.”
The appeals court ruling led to the
“The project team’s hope is that the high court reverses the D.C. Circuit Court ruling for the sake of future infrastructure projects across the country,” Casey Hopes, chair of the Seven County Infrastructure Coalition, said in a statement. “The (National Environmental Policy Act) process needs to be clarified and solidified.”
The coalition’s petition to the high court was supported by Utah’s attorney general, who
The railway would extend from two terminus points in the Uinta Basin to connect with an existing Union Pacific line, providing a