Take Back the Truth is an Energy Transfer website dedicated to setting the record straight, not only on oil and gas, but on our projects and our company.
Europe has spent the last several years rebuilding energy supply networks and expanding industrial infrastructure. As that investment continues, permitting stability and confidence in judicial outcomes remain increasingly important to keeping large-scale projects moving forward.
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https://t.co/UVVo6iPU8p
Europe’s anti-SLAPP Directive was designed to protect legitimate speech, not serve as a mechanism to relitigate disputes already decided in foreign courts. As energy and industrial projects become more complex and capital intensive, legal certainty and confidence in permitting systems remain essential to long-term infrastructure investment.
Read more: https://t.co/UVVo6iPU8p
“Energy Transfer appreciates the North Dakota Supreme Court’s careful decision. We have always believed that North Dakota’s courts, laws, and juries cannot be collaterally attacked in a foreign forum. Today’s ruling protects the authority of the North Dakota judicial system and the jury’s unanimous verdict from an improper end-run abroad. Energy Transfer looks forward to bringing this legal process to a close and holding Greenpeace accountable for the harm it caused.” - Trey Cox, partner at Gibson Dunn and lead counsel for Energy Transfer.
https://t.co/ij4HaGPLQU
The North Dakota Supreme Court’s recent ruling reinforces an important principle for large-scale infrastructure development: legal disputes decided in U.S. courts should not be relitigated through foreign jurisdictions.
As energy projects become larger and more capital intensive, legal certainty remains critical to infrastructure investment, long-term planning, and the ability to build projects that support energy reliability and economic growth.
Read more from the Hill: https://t.co/G9ZXWqm47U
The @nodakchamber supports ND Supreme Court’s decision in the @EnergyTransfer v. @Greenpeace case. For GNDC, the case is about protecting confidence in ND’s legal system and maintaining a business climate where companies can rely on fair and final judicial outcomes.
https://t.co/CiVOT8ZFWp
GNDC filed an amicus brief in the Energy Transfer v. Greenpeace case to defend a core principle: court decisions should be final.
After a North Dakota jury ruled, Greenpeace pursued a parallel case in the Netherlands to challenge that outcome. The North Dakota Supreme Court rejected that effort, reinforcing the importance of final and reliable legal decisions.
Read more: https://t.co/U0zcYPcN4c
A U.S. jury issued a final ruling. Now Greenpeace is asking a Dutch court to reverse it.
Law professor Donald Kochan argues this approach challenges long-standing legal principles around finality and respect between courts, raising broader questions about whether foreign venues can be used to revisit settled U.S. cases.
Article:
https://t.co/i6s5ys3KzI
Greenpeace is asking a Dutch court to upend [international] legal order in its case against Energy Transfer, explains Donald Kochan. "The loser can pursue appeals, but they cannot
start over in a different trial court altogether, hoping for a better result.”
https://t.co/i6s5ys3KzI
BREAKING NEWS: The North Dakota Supreme Court has instructed a district court judge to stop Greenpeace's overseas free speech lawsuit against Energy Transfer.
Trey Cox, the lead attorney representing Energy Transfer in its lawsuit against Greenpeace, applauded the ruling. In a Thursday statement, he said the high court’s decision “protects the authority of the North Dakota judicial system and the jury’s unanimous verdict from an improper end-run abroad.”
https://t.co/POuwIjqV6n
Recent headlines out of the Middle East are a powerful reminder that global stability and energy stability go hand in hand. As Joshua Backaby highlights in this op-ed, America’s energy security depends on strong, reliable pipeline infrastructure right here at home.
https://t.co/UWA3mcOtq9
Litigation is emerging as a growing risk for U.S. energy infrastructure.
Dozens of climate lawsuits are targeting oil and gas companies, raising questions about project certainty and long-term investment.
At a time of rising demand and global instability, delays to pipelines and related infrastructure could have broader impacts on energy supply and costs.
Article:
https://t.co/AHcwFSMZQg
"In its European lawsuit, Greenpeace does not offer any new evidence to dispute the findings of the North Dakota jury, which spent weeks hearing expert testimony and studying the evidence. Instead, it’s seeking a judiciary that is likely to have a more favourable view toward its brand of environmental extremism.” - Michael McKenna, columnist for The Washington Times.
https://t.co/n67n3B7071
Nathaniel Buynak of Sherwood, N.D. writes: "To protect American courts and juries, North Dakota courts must act to shut down Greenpeace’s ridiculous EU lawsuit."
https://t.co/AiFk8QPO4K
A jury in North Dakota reviewed the facts and made a call. Now Greenpeace is trying to redo the case overseas because they didn’t like the outcome.
If foreign courts can override U.S. verdicts, what does that say about our legal system?
https://t.co/2wcWHF7pfa
Donald Kochan, Law Professor at George Mason University, argues that Greenpeace’s actions demonstrate a blatant disregard for both the American court and multiple longstanding and fundamental legal principles regarding finality and comity:
“It is understandable why Greenpeace may not like the outcome of the North Dakota lawsuit, but our system has a very robust appeals process in which parties may press their claims of error. European courts, or any other state or foreign court for that matter, are not supposed to be available for second bites at the apple or to sit as courts of error second guessing the decisions of their peer courts.”
https://t.co/451kewe9Mk
"Energy demand is skyrocketing. America needs energy projects to come online, to prevent blackouts and cost jumps. Instead of supporting that, we are giving extremists a ticket to break the law and avoid the consequences. This is not an issue of free speech. This is an issue of holding lawbreakers accountable and ensuring America can protect its energy systems." - Wayne Christian, Commissioner, Railroad Commission of Texas
https://t.co/3VMFI5EwjO
"This is not just another legal dispute... Greenpeace lost in court and should pay the damages awarded, not run to a foreign court while putting the rest of us at risk." - Tom Pyle, President of the American Energy Alliance.
https://t.co/9kLK6MDyFa
Should foreign courts be able to sidestep American juries?
That’s the question raised in a The Wall Street Journal piece on Greenpeace’s attempt to use a Dutch court to nullify the Dakota Access Pipeline verdict against it.
Article: https://t.co/DHH5gitYhB