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Members of the Tropa Yoemia stand at the location where a section of the Sempra Energy gas pipeline was extracted by the Yaqui tribe in the village of Loma de Bacum, Sonora state, Mexico, on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017. Sempra Energy's natural gas pipeline that runs in Loma de Bacum cost $400 million, part of a network that's supposed to carry gas from Arizona more than 500 miles to Mexico's Pacific coast. It hasn't done that since August, when members of the indigenous Yaqui tribe enraged by what they viewed as an unauthorized trespass their land used a backhoe truck to puncture and extract a 25-foot segment. Photographer: Yael Martinez/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Members of the Tropa Yoemia stand at the location where a section of the Sempra Energy gas pipeline was extracted by the Yaqui tribe in the village of Loma de Bacum, Sonora state, Mexico, on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017. Sempra Energy's natural gas pipeline that runs in Loma de Bacum cost $400 million, part of a network that's supposed to carry gas from Arizona more than 500 miles to Mexico's Pacific coast. It hasn't done that since August, when members of the indigenous Yaqui tribe  enraged by what they viewed as an unauthorized trespass their land  used a backhoe truck to puncture and extract a 25-foot segment. Photographer: Yael Martinez/Bloomberg via Getty Images

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A resident passes a Sempra Energy Gasoducto de Aguaprieta gas pipeline marker in the village of Loma de Bacum, Sonora state, Mexico, on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017. Sempra Energy's natural gas pipeline that runs in Loma de Bacum cost $400 million, part of a network that's supposed to carry gas from Arizona more than 500 miles to Mexico's Pacific coast. It hasn't done that since August, when members of the indigenous Yaqui tribe enraged by what they viewed as an unauthorized trespass their land used a backhoe truck to puncture and extract a 25-foot segment. Photographer: Yael Martinez/Bloomberg via Getty Images

A resident passes a Sempra Energy Gasoducto de Aguaprieta gas pipeline marker in the village of Loma de Bacum, Sonora state, Mexico, on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017. Sempra Energy's natural gas pipeline that runs in Loma de Bacum cost $400 million, part of a network that's supposed to carry gas from Arizona more than 500 miles to Mexico's Pacific coast. It hasn't done that since August, when members of the indigenous Yaqui tribe  enraged by what they viewed as an unauthorized trespass their land  used a backhoe truck to puncture and extract a 25-foot segment. Photographer: Yael Martinez/Bloomberg via Getty Images

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A Sempra Energy Gasoducto de Aguaprieta gas pipeline marker stands in the village of Loma de Bacum, Sonora state, Mexico, on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017. Sempra Energy's natural gas pipeline that runs in Loma de Bacum cost $400 million, part of a network that's supposed to carry gas from Arizona more than 500 miles to Mexico's Pacific coast. It hasn't done that since August, when members of the indigenous Yaqui tribe enraged by what they viewed as an unauthorized trespass their land used a backhoe truck to puncture and extract a 25-foot segment. Photographer: Yael Martinez/Bloomberg via Getty Images

A Sempra Energy Gasoducto de Aguaprieta gas pipeline marker stands in the village of Loma de Bacum, Sonora state, Mexico, on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017. Sempra Energy's natural gas pipeline that runs in Loma de Bacum cost $400 million, part of a network that's supposed to carry gas from Arizona more than 500 miles to Mexico's Pacific coast. It hasn't done that since August, when members of the indigenous Yaqui tribe  enraged by what they viewed as an unauthorized trespass their land  used a backhoe truck to puncture and extract a 25-foot segment. Photographer: Yael Martinez/Bloomberg via Getty Images