Tribal leaders call for Liberty Mutual to drop Keystone XL
Great Plains Tribal Chairman’s Association demands Liberty Mutual Insurance meet with Indigenous leaders
The Great Plains Tribal Chairman’s Association (GPTCA) has sent a letter to Liberty Mutual Insurance urging the company to end its relationship with the Keystone XL pipeline and to meet with tribal leaders about the company’s tar sands sector relationships. The application for the Keystone XL pipeline (KXL) certification to the state of South Dakota confirms that Liberty Mutual Insurance has issued a surety bond for the tar sands pipeline project.
The KXL pipeline, owned by the TC Energy corporation, is planned to pass through the member territories of the Great Plains Tribal Chairman’s Association, an association representing the leaders of 16 sovereign Tribal Nations in the upper midwest. These sovereign nations possess substantial treaty obligations, water rights, cultural and natural resources that will be affected by the pipeline project. Since the very beginning of the KXL permitting process, these tribal nations have rejected the approval of the pipeline to cross their lands.
Great Plains Tribal Chairman’s Association Chairman Harold Frazier states, “This tar sands pipeline is a violation of our treaty rights and it is a threat to our land, our water, and our people. We strongly urge Liberty Mutual Insurance to immediately end its relationship with the KXL pipeline project.”
Along with ending its relationship with TC Energy, the Great Plains Tribal Chairman’s Association requested a meeting with Indigenous leaders to discuss Liberty Mutual’s relationship with the tar sands sector overall.
The letter comes on the heels of insurance giant Zurich announcing it will no longer provide coverage to the Trans Mountain pipeline, another tar sands project that is being contested by Canadian First Nations in British Columbia. Liberty Mutual remains a primary insurance provider for Trans Mountain with a coverage amount of $250 million.
Dallas Goldtooth, National Campaigner for the Indigenous Environmental Network states, “For the benefit of all citizens and land we are demanding the insurance sector to be accountable for supporting the destruction of mother earth via fossil fuel projects. Liberty Mutual must decide if it truly wants to be the champion of oil and gas. That decision is far past due.”