CA, US & World
Multiple lawsuits aim to halt oil pipeline off Santa Barbara

SANTA BARBARA, CA — A high-stakes legal battle is unfolding off the coast of Santa Barbara as state agencies and environmental organizations move to halt the restart of three offshore oil rigs. The conflict centers on a network of pipelines that have remained dormant since 2015, when a catastrophic leak caused one of the worst environmental disasters in California’s history.
The current showdown is a direct clash between state environmental protections and federal executive power, as the Trump administration attempts to force the pipelines back into service.
The 2015 Legacy of Corrosion
The pipelines in question have been idle since a massive spill near Refugio State Beach in 2015. That disaster, caused by severe pipeline corrosion, killed thousands of marine animals and sea birds and devastated the local tourism and fishing industries.
Environmental groups, including the Center for Biological Diversity, argue that the infrastructure is still unsafe. "This pipeline actually still suffers from those corrosion issues," said staff attorney Talia Nimmer. "Restarting these pipelines, especially absent all necessary approvals, significantly puts our wildlife, our residents, and our coast in jeopardy."
National Security vs. State Law
In March 2026, the White House invoked the Defense Production Act (DPA) to facilitate the immediate restart of oil flow. The administration argues that boosting domestic production is a matter of national security given the energy demands and supply disruptions caused by the war with Iran.
However, the State of California has countered with its own lawsuit. State officials argue that the White House cannot use the DPA to unilaterally override settled court cases or bypass state environmental laws.
The Fight in Superior Court
The legal pressure on the pipeline's owner, Sable Offshore, is mounting:
May 22 Hearing: Environmental groups will ask a Superior Court judge to order an immediate shutdown.
Contempt of Court: Groups are seeking to force Sable to demonstrate why they should not be held in contempt, following a recent ruling that the company violated state law by resuming pumping operations.
Fears of National Precedent
Beyond Santa Barbara, environmentalists fear that if the federal government successfully overrides California’s laws, it could set a precedent for ignoring environmental protections nationwide.
Bill Hickman of the Surfrider Foundation noted that the administration has already proposed opening vast areas of previously protected federal waters to new drilling. He points to recent actions in the Gulf of Mexico, where a new drilling site was approved with a waiver from the Endangered Species Act, as a warning of what could happen in the Pacific.
"Californians don't want it off of our coast," Hickman stressed. "We want to transition to clean and renewable energy."
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By: Public News Service
May 5, 2026


