Sable Offshore (SOC) is trading more like a regulatory battle than a normal oil stock.That is the clearest way to read the latest fight over Line 325, a section of pipeline tied to the company’s Santa Ynez restart plan.

Through the plan, the U.S. Department of Energy is forcing reactivation of Sable Offshore’s Santa Ynez Unit, part of the Las Flores Pipeline System in California.

Line 325 (including 325A Gaviota to Sisquoc and 325B Sisquoc to Pentland) is a crucial part of the crude transport system.

Federal officials have pushed Sable forward, but California is still arguing it retains authority over key parts of the system, including land access and pipeline oversight.

California still controls a key piece of oil pipeline system

The most important detail is not especially dramatic, but it is important. A four-mile stretch in Gaviota State Park still requires a state easement for pipeline maintenance, and the earlier 30-year easement expired in 2016.

Since then, State Parks has relied on shorter-term access permissions while it reviews a longer-term request. That leaves Sable exposed to a state-level bottleneck, even as Washington pushes the project in the opposite direction.

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That is why this story keeps snapping back into focus.

One federal green light does not automatically clear a project that still runs through California land, California process, and California courts.

The issue is not just whether Sable can produce oil. It is whether the company can move that oil to market on a timeline that still works financially.

The federal push to restart the oil lines is real, but so is the lawsuit

Sable did get a meaningful boost from Washington late last year.

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) said in December that the Santa Ynez Pipeline System was an active interstate pipeline under federal jurisdiction, approving Sable’s restart plan for segments 324 and 325.

It then issued an emergency special permit tied to corrosion and integrity management requirements. Sable later said it would continue operating under those conditions while PHMSA considers a longer-term special permit request.

California moved back quickly. In January, Attorney General Rob Bonta sued the Trump administration, arguing PHMSA unlawfully tried to federalize the lines, bypass state authority and approve restart steps that should still be subject to California oversight.

That suit matters, because it keeps the restart timeline from becoming a simple federal-agency story.

The U.S. DOT deemed the Santa Ynez Pipeline System an active interstate pipeline under federal jurisdiction, approving Sable’s restart plan for segments 324 and 325.

The balance sheet shows why Santa Ynez delays matter for Sable

Shutterstock This would be a different story if Sable had years of financial flexibility. It does not.

In its full-year 2025 results, Sable reported a net loss of $410.2 million, cash and cash equivalents of $97.7 million, and short-term outstanding debt of $921.6 million, including paid-in-kind interest.

The company has also put a $250 million at-the-market stock program in place, giving it another funding option if delays continue.

That does not make dilution inevitable, but it does make the timeline important. Sable is still trying to turn a restart narrative into an actual sales narrative. If that process gets dragged out by easement fights, litigation or added conditions, the market is likely to focus more on financing risk.

Sable by the numbers

  • Market cap: about $2.4 billion
  • Cash at year-end 2025: $97.7 million
  • Short-term outstanding debt at year-end 2025: $921.6 million
  • Prior gross production before the long shutdown: About 34 MBOE/D

Why Sable is trading like a politics stock

A favorable federal headline can send the stock sharply higher, as happened after reports that President Donald Trump planned to use emergency powers to help restart output. A state legal challenge can reverse sentiment just as quickly, as happened after California sued over the federal pipeline actions.

The company still has an asset with real value. But until it moves from “restart progress” to reliable commercial sales, the stock is likely to keep reacting to process more than production.

That is why Line 325 matters so much. On a map, it is only one segment. In the equity story, it is one of the gates that still has to open.

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