Calgary Herald

Commission orders revisions to ‘inadequate’ environmen­t report

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ST. PAUL, MINN. Minnesota officials need to do more work on the environmen­tal review of Enbridge Energy’s proposed replacemen­t for its aging Line 3 crude oil pipeline, which has drawn strong opposition from environmen­tal and tribal groups.

The Public Utilities Commission voted 4-1 this week to declare that the environmen­tal impact statement is “inadequate” and sent it back for revisions to the Minnesota Department of Commerce, which conducted the review, the Star Tribune reported Friday. The PUC isn’t scheduled to decide the bigger question of whether the project is needed until late April at the earliest.

The PUC told the agency to revise three small parts of the EIS within 60 days, partly to include more informatio­n on how one particular alternativ­e route could be altered to avoid environmen­tally sensitive geological formations. The PUC’s other questions also involved alternativ­e routes. The main document runs about 2,000 pages and has about 12,000 pages of appendices.

Line 3 carries Canadian crude oil to Enbridge’s terminal in Superior, Wisc. It starts in Alberta and clips a corner of North Dakota before crossing Minnesota. Enbridge wants to follow the existing route to Clearbrook, Minn., then take a more southerly route to Superior. Enbridge’s preferred route would avoid two American Indian reservatio­ns crossed by the existing pipeline where tribal approval is seen as unlikely, but it would cross the pristine Mississipp­i River headwaters region and areas where Ojibwa bands still have treaty rights and harvest wild rice.

At Thursday’s hearing, representa­tives of the Fond du Lac and Mille Lacs bands testified that the EIS was inadequate because it lacked a formal tribal cultural resource study. The survey is underway, they said, but it won’t be finished until sometime next year.

“Once again, Native American interests have slipped through the cracks,” said Paul Blackburn, a lawyer for Honor the Earth, an Indian-led environmen­tal organizati­on.

Calgary-based Enbridge says the project is necessary because its existing Line 3, which was built in the 1960s, can run at only half its original capacity because it’s increasing­ly subject to corrosion and cracking, and its maintenanc­e needs are expected to grow rapidly. The company says replacing it with a state-of-the-art pipeline would better protect the environmen­t against oil spills, and would restore its capacity to 760,000 barrels per day, ensuring reliable deliveries of oil to Midwest refineries.

Enbridge estimates the cost of the overall pipeline project at US$7.5 billion. Constructi­on is already underway in Canada and Wisconsin.

Several protesters have been arrested in recent months at the pipeline site near Superior, where demonstrat­ors have included veterans of the protests against the Dakota Access pipeline on the Standing Rock Reservatio­n in North Dakota.

 ?? DAVID BLOOM ?? While constructi­on has started in Western Canada for Enbridge Energy’s Line 3 oil pipeline replacemen­t, approval by the state of Minnesota remains on hold until its Public Utilities Commission decides on whether to approve the work, and if so, which...
DAVID BLOOM While constructi­on has started in Western Canada for Enbridge Energy’s Line 3 oil pipeline replacemen­t, approval by the state of Minnesota remains on hold until its Public Utilities Commission decides on whether to approve the work, and if so, which...

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