Resistance to the Line 3 pipeline expansion is led by Indigenous women and
two-spirit people. Ojibwe-led groups including Giniw Collective, Camp Migizi, Red Lake Treaty Camp, RISE Coalition, and Honor the Earth among others have been at the center of resistance. Demonstrators and protesters organizing in opposition to the pipeline refer to themselves as "
water protectors" Organizers aim to convince the Biden administration to revoke or suspend the pipeline project's federal clean water permit. Construction of the pipeline immediately commenced.
Resistance camps and demonstrations speaks near the headwaters of the Mississippi River Community organizers have established ceremonial lodges and resistance camps along the length of pipeline. Among them is the Welcome Water Protectors Center which serves as an introduction to other camps. Protesters gathered at one of the first construction sites for the pipeline in
Aitkin County, Minnesota on January 9, 2021. Eight people were arrested for trespassing. Weeks after the protest, the Aitkin County Sheriff's Office charged some movement leaders with misdemeanors, using video livestreamed on
Facebook as evidence. Those charged included Winona LaDuke, Tara Houska, Shanai Matteson, and Tania Aubid. A June 2021 concert called Protect the Water featured several musicians performing on a pontoon floating on the Mississippi River including the Indigo Girls as well as singer-songwriters
Keith Secola and Annie Humphrey.
Giniw Collective Giniw Collective is an Indigenous-women, two-spirit led collective focused on reconnecting to and directly defending the earth founded by
Tara Houska in June 2018. The group hosted thousands of water protectors at its camp, called Namewag Camp, located just off the Line 3 route over three years, and provided training in decolonization and non-violent direct action resistance. The Center For Protest Law and Litigation later won an injunction against the Hubbard County Sheriff for illegally blocking the group's home. In addition to direct actions, Giniw Collective launched the #DefundLine3 campaign in February 2021, as a founding member of Stop The Money Pipeline Coalition. The collective invited and hosted several members of "the Squad" to Namewag Camp and to meet with tribal leaders in early September to draw awareness to the Line 3 fight, including Representative
Ilhan Omar, Representative
Rashida Tlaib, Representative
Cori Bush, and Representative
Ayanna Pressley.
Camp Migizi Camp Migizi is a resistance camp against the pipeline founded by Taysha Martineau in
Cloquet, Minnesota on the
Fond du Lac Indian Reservation. Martineau
crowdfunded $30,000 to purchase an acre of land along the planned route of the expanded pipeline. The
Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa initially opposed the new pipeline, but ceased their opposition following the approval of the project.
Treaty People Gathering Following an invitation from leaders of the opposition to Line 3, around 2000
water protectors gathered for the Treaty People Gathering at the Pure Bliss Ranch on the
White Earth Indian Reservation from June 5 to 8, 2021. Attendees learned about treaty rights, non-violent direct action, and attended prayer gatherings and drum circles. The gathering culminated in two separate Indigenous-led direct actions against the pipeline on June 7, a march to the headwaters of the Mississippi River and the blockade of an Enbridge pump station. Protesters chalked the highway with a message asking President Biden to honor treaties and stop the pipeline.
Pipe and water ceremonies were held before elders walked across river marshes to the Enbridge construction site.
Fire Light Camp The Fire Light Camp was established on June 7 by tribal members and protesters at the site where Enbridge plans to bury its pipeline underneath the headwaters of the Mississippi River. As a multi-day prayer commenced, over 100 people set up camp, pitching tents along an Enbridge matting platform positioned over the river.
Two Inlets pumping station blockade On the morning of June 7, 2021, protesters scaled metal fencing to enter an Enbridge pump station about 20 miles north of
Park Rapids, Minnesota off of
Highway 71. hundreds of protesters dug trenches An old fishing boat used to block the entrance to the site bore the name "Good Trouble", after the expression used by the late civil rights leader
John Lewis. Attendees of the pump station blockade included Tara Houska as well as actors
Jane Fonda,
Taylor Schilling,
Rosanna Arquette and
Catherine Keener.
Rotor washing incident During the occupation of the pump station, protesters were "
rotor washed" by a
Customs and Border Protection helicopter after local law enforcement called for its assistance. While the Northern Lights Task Force maintained that the helicopter was there to issue a dispersal warning and that the rotor washing was unintentional, video taken by an
MPR News reporter showed the helicopter repeatedly performing a maneuver where it hovered about 20 feet off the ground for extended periods, while the wash from its rotor kicked up clouds of dust and debris towards the crowd and the people chained up on the ground. and taken in buses and vans to various county jails. Hubbard County Sheriff Cory Aukes announced that arrestees would be transferred to other counties, as there was not enough room in the county jail to hold them all.
Bank protests Opponents of Line 3 have pressured banks who are financing the pipeline expansion to cut ties with Enbridge. Banks funding the pipeline include
JPMorgan Chase,
Bank of America,
Wells Fargo,
Citigroup, the
Royal Bank of Canada, and
Toronto-Dominion Bank.
State capitol protests About 1,000 protesters held three days of demonstrations at the
Minnesota State Capitol beginning on August 25, 2021, where the building had been surrounded by security fencing. Protesters called on Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and U.S. President Joe Biden to revoke permits and end the pipeline project. Volunteers erected several
teepees on the capitol grounds, which Minnesota State Patrol officers had them remove when the protest permit expired on August 27, resulting in a stand off with law enforcement. Four people were arrested for obstruction. On August 28, 2021, protesters of the Line 3 oil pipeline marched peacefully from the Minnesota State Capitol building to outside the
Minnesota Governor's Residence to advocated for treaty rights and sovereignty of Indigenous lands. At the governor's residence, several people chained themselves to a fence and gate, and officials issued a dispersal order and several people declined to leave the area. In response, Minnesota State Patrol officers arrested and charged 69 people for disorderly conduct, riot, and threats of violence.
DC protests The
Equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson in
Lafayette Square just to the north of the
White House was vandalized with the words "Expect Us" on
Indigenous Peoples' Day (also
Columbus Day), Monday, October 11, 2021. Protestors had been chanting "respect us or expect us" in response to protesting the
Line 3 pipeline in Minnesota that runs through lands owned by Indigenous tribes who are concerned that the pipeline could spill and ruin the land they use to farm. ==Enbridge response==