National Post (National Edition)

Enbridge's Great Lakes line stirs new protest

- NIA WILLIAMS

CALGARY • The growing protest movement against U.S. oil and gas pipelines has so far focused on stopping or delaying new constructi­on, with some highprofil­e successes.

Now, in Michigan, a broad coalition of opponents is entering a new frontier: Pushing to rip out and reroute an existing pipeline — Enbridge Inc.’s aging Line 5, which crosses the Straits of Mackinac.

They fear the pipeline will leak into the Great Lakes, which contain about a fifth of the world’s fresh water and sustain the state’s secondand third-largest industries, agricultur­e and tourism.

Those concerns — which are shared by two likely candidates for governor — also have far-reaching implicatio­ns for energy firms and consumers.

Spanning more than 1,000 kilometres, Line 5 carries 540,000 barrels per day of light Canadian crude and refined products between Wisconsin and Ontario, making it a key link in Enbridge’s network transporti­ng western Canadian oil to eastern refineries. It also delivers about half the propane used to heat Michigan homes.

Moving the pipeline, built in 1953, would cost Enbridge US$4.2 million per mile — or about US$2.7 billion total, according to an estimate from IHS Markit analyst Phil Hopkins. Enbridge spokesman Ryan Duffy said that the line is structural­ly sound and constantly monitored, tested and inspected to prevent leaks. The firm plans to add 18 additional supports in the Straits this summer, he said.

The unpreceden­ted demands to move an existing pipeline present steep political and regulatory challenges, said Dirk Lever, an analyst with AltaCorp Capital in Calgary.

“Move it? The question is where,” he said. “And good luck with building a new pipeline.”

The Michigan controvers­y is only the latest pipeline fight.

Last year, protests by North Dakota’s Standing Rock Sioux, a Native American tribe, garnered national attention and delayed the opening of Energy Transfer Partners’ Dakota Access Pipeline, which finally won approval in February.

Another ETP pipeline proposed in Louisiana has drawn protests from flood protection advocates and commercial fishermen.

The Keystone XL pipeline, planned by TransCanad­a Corp, now faces a political showdown over route approval in Nebraska amid protests from farmers and ranchers.

In Michigan, pipeline opponents include regional businesses and churches, as well as local and national environmen­tal groups.

State officials have ordered two independen­t reports, expected in June — one on the pipeline’s reliabilit­y and another on potential alternativ­es if the state moves to revoke easements that allow Line 5 to operate. The reports could fuel a debate that is expected to intensify in the 2018 governor’s race.

Many opponents argue the 64-year-old Enbridge pipeline has already outlived its predicted life span. They cite a 2015 interview with an engineer on the original project, Bruce Trudgen, who said that, at the time of constructi­on, the pipeline was expected to last 50 years.

“Common sense dictates that a pipeline which is already 28 per cent past its viable life will eventually be decommissi­oned,” said Gretchen Whitmer, a former Michigan senator now campaignin­g for the Democratic nomination for governor. “Government would be wise to plan for that proactivel­y — before disaster strikes.”

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, widely expected to run for governor as a Republican, has also expressed concerns about the pipeline.

Enbridge, which operates more than 128,000 kilometres of oil and gas pipeline across North America, disputes the assertion that Line 5 has any specific life expectancy.

Regardless of initial predicatio­ns, Duffy said, new technology developed since the 1950s can now keep pipelines in better condition for longer.

Michigan’s debate over whether Line 5’s age equates to a safety hazard could resonate across a nation crisscross­ed with decades-old pipelines. More than half of U.S. pipelines were built in the 1950s or 1960s, according the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion.

When the Enbridge line reaches the Straits of Mackinac, which connect lakes Huron and Michigan, it splits into twin 20-inch diameter steel pipes, hailed as a feat of modern engineerin­g when they were installed in 1953.

Now, opponents here view them as the product of an era in which the damage from oil spills was not wellunders­tood.

Enbridge is still working to overcome public concern over the 2010 failure of its Line 6B pipeline, which leaked 20,000 barrels of crude into Michigan’s Kalamazoo River in one of the largest inland spills in U.S. history.

The Straits — five miles wide and 120 feet deep — swirl with strong currents that would disperse contaminan­ts from an oil spill faster than anywhere else in the Great Lakes, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

The line has never spilled under the Straits, but has leaked at least eight times at other points between 1980 and October 2015, according to the U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administra­tion (PHMSA). None of the leaks were larger than 100 barrels.

The leak that raised the most concern was a February 2012 incident in Central Michigan that environmen­talists contend exposed a flaw in the original constructi­on.

The leak of about 20 barrels was traced to a tear in the pipeline that was estimated to have originated at about the time the line was constructe­d, according to a PHMSA report on the spill. The tear later spread into a larger crack, causing the leak.

Enbridge declined to comment on the leaks.

 ?? AL GOLDIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Spanning more than 1,000 kilometres, Line 5 carries 540,000 barrels per day of light Canadian crude and refined products between Wisconsin and Ontario, making it a key link in Enbridge’s network. Above, the Mackinac Bridge, the dividing line between...
AL GOLDIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Spanning more than 1,000 kilometres, Line 5 carries 540,000 barrels per day of light Canadian crude and refined products between Wisconsin and Ontario, making it a key link in Enbridge’s network. Above, the Mackinac Bridge, the dividing line between...

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