Close
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Sunday, March 1, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
CO2 Chronicles
Premium Access
  • Newsroom
  • Blogs
  • Exposés
  • Subscriptions
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Newsroom
Blogs
Exposés
Subscribe
About Us
Contact Us
✉️
  Trending ....
What Does Sex and CCS Have in Common? February 26, 2026
Who’s Really Behind ‘Industry Makes’? February 14, 2026
When They Can’t Defend CCS, They Attack the Citizen February 2, 2026
From the Bayou to the Capitol: Kim Coates’ Unshakable Stand for Community Protection. January 31, 2026
“Whose Voice Is It, Really?” — Neil Riser’s Push for CCS and the Silence of His Constituents January 28, 2026
Next
Prev

HB37: Louisiana Property Rights Come First — No Foreign Entity Should Take Our Land

If you give the wrong entities access to expropriation (eminent domain), you don’t just invite “development” — you invite legal force, court pressure, and the ability to take land from families who refuse to sign.

Post Script: Carbon counts, and so does your voice. Thanks for reading the CO2 Chronicles.

Author: Renee’ Savant
HB37
Renee Savantby Renee Savant
January 26, 2026
Reading Time: 3 mins read

Who We Are ?

The CO₂ Chronicles is a citizen-powered investigative platform exposing Louisiana’s carbon capture schemes, corruption, and land rights violations. We’re researchers and journalists—publishing exposés, audio stories, and FOIA-backed evidence you won’t find in the mainstream.
100% funded by everyday people like you. 👇👇

Join the Fight

"Power the Stories That Shape Our State"

“Join us in preserving Louisiana’s identity, uplifting communities, and ensuring local stories continue to inspire change for generations to come.”

Donate Now

HB37: Louisiana Property Rights Come First — No Foreign Entity Should Take Our Land

Louisiana citizens are waking up to an uncomfortable truth:

If you give the wrong entities access to expropriation (eminent domain), you don’t just invite “development” — you invite legal force, court pressure, and the ability to take land from families who refuse to sign.

House Bill 37, authored by Representative Chuck Owen, deserves strong public support.

This is not a flashy bill. It doesn’t rely on political talking points.

It simply draws a line that Louisiana should have drawn a long time ago:

Foreign entities should not be allowed to expropriate private property in Louisiana.

Click to read the full bill.

HB37-Bill

What This Bill Does (In Plain English)

This bill updates Louisiana law (R.S. 19:2) to prohibit expropriation by foreign entities in two key situations:

1) If they are not incorporated or registered to do business in the United States

This law makes clear that Louisiana’s expropriation authority does not apply to any foreign corporation or legal entity that is not incorporated or registered under U.S. laws.

 

2) If their country does not have a reciprocal expropriation agreement with the U.S.

This law also blocks expropriation authority for foreign entities whose country of primary ownership or incorporation does not offer reciprocal expropriation protections with the United States.

In other words:
If Americans do not receive fair and equal treatment under that country’s system, then companies tied to that country should not be able to use Louisiana law to take Louisiana land.

That’s not radical.
That’s common sense.

Why This Bill Matters Right Now

This bill is not happening in a vacuum.

Louisiana is facing one of the biggest land-rights showdowns in modern history — driven by massive infrastructure buildouts tied to:

  • pipeline development
  • industrial expansion
  • carbon dioxide transport
  • carbon dioxide injection and storage

Under current Louisiana law, expropriation powers extend to a wide range of entities — including those involved in carbon dioxide pipelines and underground storage.

And the public should understand what that means:

When expropriation is available, the negotiation is no longer equal.

It becomes:
Sign… or be taken to court.

This bill helps prevent Louisiana citizens from being placed in that situation by foreign-controlled entities.

This is About Property Rights — Not Politics

Supporting HB37 is not “anti-business.”
It’s not “anti-development.”
It’s not “left” or “right.”

It is simply pro-Louisiana.

A state that values private property cannot allow foreign entities to gain the legal power to force landowners into expropriation proceedings — especially when Louisiana residents are already fighting to understand what is happening beneath their feet:

  • legacy oilfield impacts
  • abandoned wells
  • fault lines and geologic instability
  • uncertainty around long-term monitoring
  • regulatory and enforcement gaps

If an entity wants to build something in Louisiana, it should do what every honest project must do:

 Negotiate Fairly
Pay Fairly
 Respect the “NO.”

Not reach for expropriation as leverage.

HB37 Closes a Dangerous Door Before It’s Too Late

HB37 targets a simple but dangerous loophole:

Foreign entities may have the finances, lawyers, and corporate structure to push projects through — but Louisiana residents are the ones who live with the consequences.

HB37 places a reasonable limitation on who can use Louisiana’s expropriation laws.

Because once land is taken, the damage isn’t just financial.

It’s generational.

What This Bill Does Not Do

This is important because opponents will try to twist the bill.

This bill does not ban all foreign investment.
This bill does not block voluntary land sales or voluntary easements.
This bill does not stop infrastructure projects that follow lawful, fair standards.

HB37 only restricts something far more serious:

🚫 The power to take private property by force through expropriation.

The Bottom Line

This bill is the kind of legislation Louisiana residents should rally behind — because it establishes a principle that should never be negotiable:

Louisiana property rights belong to Louisianans, not to foreign entities with the legal authority to expropriate land.

If lawmakers want to prove they stand with citizens instead of corporate pressure, this is one of the clearest opportunities they’ve been given.

Support the bill.
Track it.
Show up when it moves through the committee.
Make legislators go on record.

Louisiana doesn’t have to surrender land rights in the name of “progress.”

Not anymore.

 

Latest Exposés
Exposés

The Quiet Foundation – How CCS Crept Into Louisiana Law – Part 1

December 13, 2025
Exposés

The Last Drop: Louisiana’s Gamble with the Chicot Aquifer – Part-2 unlocked (free weekend edition)

October 10, 2025
Exposés

Independent research shows our aquifers and communities are one crack away from danger — while officials keep repeating “the science says it’s safe.”

September 20, 2025
Exposés

Beneath the Bayou: The Fight for Lake Maurepas’ Future

November 8, 2025
Exposés

How CCS Came to Louisiana

October 4, 2025
Exposés

Payoffs, Pipelines, and Panic: Inside Louisiana’s Carbon Capture Scheme Expose (Part 1)

October 4, 2025
18
SHARES
128
VIEWS
Share on Facebook

Support Independent Journalism in Louisiana

Truth has No Lobbyist.

We don’t have corporate sponsors or political backers—just readers like you who believe the truth still matters. CO₂ Chronicles exists because Louisiana deserves watchdogs who can’t be bought and stories that can’t be silenced. If our reporting speaks to you, help us keep digging. Subscribe, share, and stand with us as we shine light where power prefers darkness.

Support Independent Journalism

“Get the Latest stories in your inbox.”

✉️
Next Post
Texas Primacy Exposed Louisiana’s Weak Spot

Texas Primacy Exposed Louisiana’s Weak Spot

  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© CO2 Chronicles. All rights reserved. Exposing Corruption, Defending Louisiana.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Newsroom
  • Blogs
  • Exposés
  • Subscriptions
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© CO2 Chronicles. All rights reserved. Exposing Corruption, Defending Louisiana.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?