Sable Offshore begins flowing oil through controversial California pipeline

By Noah Baustin | 03/17/2026 07:07 AM EDT

The Texas company achieved its yearslong goal of restarting its oil pipeline system after an order by the Energy secretary.

Pelicans float on the water with an offshore oil platform in the background in the Santa Barbara Channel.

Offshore oil production has put California officials at odds with federal regulators. Mark J. Terrill/AP

A Texas company that has been stuck in a yearslong regulatory skirmish with California regulators began transporting oil from offshore wells through a contested pipeline after the Trump administration stepped into the fray to overrule state officials on national security grounds.

What happened: Sable Offshore announced Monday that, since Saturday, it had been using the Santa Ynez pipeline system to move oil from its wells off the Santa Barbara coast to Pentland Station in Kern County, California. The company said it expects to begin sales of the crude by April 1.

In a statement, Sable CEO Jim Flores said that his company “is putting California consumers first by increasing domestic supply of crude oil into the California market” and “we look forward to continuing” in the wake of the Department of Energy action on Friday.

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Why it matters: The announcement indicates that despite continued opposition from California officials, Sable sees Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s order that the company ship its product to market in the name of national defense as sufficient legal cover to ramp up operations.

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