A company has said it would cancel its plans for a 1,300-mile (2,092-km) pipeline across five Midwestern states that would have gathered carbon dioxide emissions from ethanol plants and buried the gas deep underground, according to Jack Dura's report for the Associated Press (AP).
Navigator CO2 Ventures' Heartland Greenway project is among a handful of similar ventures supported by the renewable fuels industry and farming organizations but met with fiery opposition from all sides. I Photo: Heartland Greenway Facebook
Navigator CO2 Ventures' Heartland Greenway project is among a handful of similar ventures supported by the renewable fuels industry and farming organizations, but opposed by many landowners and environmental groups who question their safety and effectiveness in reducing climate-warming gases.
In a written statement, the company said the "unpredictable nature of the regulatory and government processes involved, particularly in South Dakota and Iowa," were key to the decision to cancel the project.
Navigator's pipeline would have carried planet-warming CO2 emissions from more than 20 plants across Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and South Dakota for permanent storage deep underground in Illinois.
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