The Reporter (Vacaville)

Minnesota gives final green light to disputed oil pipeline

- Cy Steve Karnowski

MINNEAPOLI­S >> Minnesota regulators approved the final permit Monday for Enbridge Energy’s Line 3 crude oil pipeline replacemen­t across northern Minnesota, giving the company the green light to begin constructi­on on the $2.6 billion project.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency granted a constructi­on storm water permit for the project, which was the last hurdle that Calgary, Albertabas­ed Enbridge needed to clear after years of reviews and court battles. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the independen­t Minnesota Public Utilities Commission gave their final approvals last week.

The company and its supporters welcomed the decision, but opponents have vowed to keep up their fight.

“Constructi­on can now begin,” Enbridge spokeswoma­n Juli Kellner said in a statement that didn’t specify when that would happen.

But Enbridge has signaled that the start could be imminent. The company notified landowners along the route via letters earlier in the month that it expected constructi­on to “start on approximat­ely November 30.” The company has previously said it expected the work to take about nine months.

“This is the culminatio­n of six years of evidence and science-based review of the project,” Kellner said. “Line 3 is poised to provide significan­t economic benefits for counties, small businesses, Native American communitie­s, and union members — bringing 4,200 family-sustaining, mostly local constructi­on jobs, millions of dollars in local spending and additional tax revenues at a time when Northern Minnesota needs it most.”

But two tribes — the Red Lake and White Earth Bands of Chippewa — asked the PUC last week to stay its approval of the project, saying the influx of constructi­on workers would put residents along the route at higher risk of COVID-19. A consolidat­ed appeal by environmen­tal and tribal groups is also pending before the Minnesota Court of Appeals.

Opponents say the project threatens spills in pristine waters where Native Americans harvest wild rice and that the Canadian tar sands oil it plans to carry would aggravate climate change.

Enbridge said replacing the deteriorat­ing pipeline, which was built in the 1960s and runs at only half its original capacity, is the best option for protecting the environmen­t while meeting the region’s energy needs. The company said it has instituted strict coronaviru­s testing and screening protocols for workers to protect them and surroundin­g communitie­s.

“Thousands of our friends and neighbors across Minnesota look forward to using their constructi­on skills to protect our environmen­t and communitie­s by replacing an existing deteriorat­ing pipeline,” Joel Smith, president of the Minnesota and North Dakota council of the Laborers’ Internatio­nal Union of North America.

Line 3 begins in Alberta, Canada, and clips a corner of North Dakota before crossing Minnesota on its way to Enbridge’s terminal in Superior, Wisconsin. The replacemen­t segments in Canada, North Dakota and Wisconsin are already complete, leaving only the 337-mile stretch in Minnesota. Altogether Enbridge expects to spend $2.9 billion on the U.S. portion.

“This project has faced years of scrutiny and unpreceden­ted obstructio­n from Democrats and their allies,” Republican Minnesota House Minority Leader Kurt Daudt, of Crown, said in a statement. But he added that the process “ultimately” process worked.

“Let’s get to work on the Line 3 pipeline,” he said.

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