SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California sued the federal government Friday for approving a Texas-based company's plans to restart two oil pipelines along the state's coast, escalating a fight over the Trump administration's removal of regulatory barriers to offshore oil drilling for the first time in decades.
The administration has hailed the project by Houston-based Sable Offshore Corp. to restart production in waters off Santa Barbara damaged by a 2015 oil spill as the kind of project President Donald Trump wants to increase U.S. energy production.
The state oversees the pipelines that run through Santa Barbara and Kern counties, said Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta.
''The federal administration has no right to usurp California's regulatory authority,'' he said at a news conference. ''We're taking them to court to draw a line in the sand and to protect our coast, beaches and communities from potentially hazardous pipelines.''
But the U.S. Transportation Department agency that approved Sable's plan pushed back on the lawsuit.
''Restarting the Las Flores Pipeline will bring much needed American energy to a state with the highest gas prices in the country,'' said a spokesperson with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.
Sable did not respond for comment on the lawsuit.
Trump signed an executive order on the first day of his second term to reverse former President Joe Biden's ban on future offshore oil drilling on the East and West coasts. A federal court later struck down Biden's order to withdraw 625 million acres of federal waters from oil development.