Waterloo Region Record

Enbridge oil pipeline in Hamilton tampered with

- Michelle McQuigge The Canadian Press

Hamilton police are investigat­ing multiple instances of tampering at an oil pipeline project in the city.

Investigat­ors provided few details about the incidents involving the Line 10 pipeline, which runs through Hamilton and is owned by Enbridge Inc.

The damage consisted of holes drilled into the pipeline, adding there have been multiple instances of trespassin­g in the past week, police said Thursday in a release. No other informatio­n was available.

A 35-kilometre stretch of the Line 10 pipeline, which transports crude oil, is under constructi­on as Enbridge looks to replace 30-centimetre steel pipe installed in 1962 with a more robust 50-centimetre variety.

Shortly before police announced the investigat­ion, a group purporting to fight on behalf of Indigenous people and the environmen­t sent an email to the Canadian Press taking responsibi­lity for various instances of damage to the Line 10 pipeline.

The group contends it has been “sabotaging” sections of pipe since the replacemen­t work began. They claim to have drilled holes of varying sizes in some sections of pipe and poured corrosive chemicals in others, but did not say if this occurred during the past week.

“We do this in solidarity with the Indigenous peoples of this area. A people who have been displaced, threatened and murdered since early colonial arrivals — who still continue to face this violence,” the email said, adding that previously laid sections of Line 10 would have to be replaced because of prospectiv­e damage.

Hamilton police would not comment on whether the group or its members were under investigat­ion.

Enbridge said in a statement that the recent damage involved tampering with stored pipe, but did not immediatel­y address the claims from the group.

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