Michigan Agency Approves Enbridge's Line 5 Tunnel Project Permit -- OPIS
05 December 2023 - 5:32AM
Dow Jones News
State regulators in Michigan have approved a permit needed for
Enbridge's efforts to build a tunnel under the Straits of Mackinac
to house a replacement section of its Line 5 pipeline.
The approval by the Michigan Public Service Commission comes
despite ongoing efforts by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and state Attorney
General Dana Nessel to shut the 540,000-barrel-a-day mixed-products
pipeline.
In an announcement about the Friday decision, the MPSC said it
approved the tunnel-siting permit after determining there was a
public need to replace the four-mile section of pipeline that
currently sits exposed on the bottom of the straits, which connect
Lake Michigan and Lake Huron.
The MPSC said that without the pipeline, "suppliers would need
to use higher-risk and costlier alternative fuel supply sources and
transportation for Michigan customers, including those who use
propane for home heating."
The MPSC said that relying on other forms of
transportation--such as by truck, rail, oil tanker or barges--to
move products now carried by the pipeline would increase the risk
of spills that could significantly harm the Great Lakes.
"There are no feasible and prudent alternatives to the
replacement project pursuant to the Michigan Environmental
Protection Act," the commission's statement said.
The commission said the tunnel would be a significant
improvement over the existing pipeline configuration, reducing the
risk of anchor strikes while also serving to contain any potential
spill within the tunnel.
The commission voted 2-0 to approve the permit, with Chairman
Daniel Scripps and Commissioner Katherine Peretick voting in favor
and Commissioner Alessandra Carreon abstaining.
Both Scripps and Peretick were appointed by Whitmer, who had
campaigned on a pledge to shut the pipeline.
On Monday, Enbridge said the MPSC approval was "a major step
forward in making the Great Lakes Tunnel Project a reality."
"The MPSC carefully examined this complex issue and considered
many viewpoints, questions, concerns, and ideas," the company said
in a statement. "Ultimately, the MPSC agreed with its staff's
conclusions that Line 5 transports critically needed energy for
Michigan and the region and placing the Line 5 pipeline in the
Great Lakes Tunnel better protects the Great Lakes."
The Canadian company said it is ready to begin work on the
project once it receives necessary approvals from the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers. In April, the corps said its draft
Environmental Impact Statement on the project, originally targeted
for completion late this year, now probably won't be ready until
spring 2025.
Stacey LaRouche, Whitmer's press secretary, on Monday said the
governor's office was reviewing the MPSC decision.
"The federal government is also conducting its own review of
Enbridge's proposal, which remains pending, and the continued
operation of the dual pipelines is still the subject of ongoing
litigation," LaRouche said.
The 645-mile pipeline carries light crude and mixed NGLs from
Superior, Wis., to Sarnia, Ontario. Line 5 supplies about 28% of
the refining feedstock for Marathon Petroleum Corp.'s Detroit
refinery, Enbridge has said. It also supplies refineries in Toledo,
Ohio, operated by PBF Energy Inc. and BP/Cenovus. In Canada, Suncor
Energy's 85,000 b/d refinery in Sarnia as well as fractionation
facilities in the city also rely on Line 5.
In addition, the pipeline supplies about 55% of Michigan's total
propane needs and 65% of the propane used in the Upper Peninsula
and Northern Michigan.
The state and Enbridge have been involved in an ongoing legal
dispute over Whitmer's efforts to shut the pipeline. The governor
in 2020 said she was revoking Line 5's state-granted easements.
Whitmer claimed Enbridge had repeatedly violated terms of the
easement agreement and that the possibility of a spill into the
Great Lakes posed too great an environmental risk. But
Enbridge ignored her order to stop operation of the underwater
section by May 2021, saying only the federal government has
authority over interstate pipelines such as Line 5. A federal judge
has so far sided with Enbridge.
This content was created by Oil Price Information Service, which
is operated by Dow Jones & Co. OPIS is run independently from
Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
--Reporting by Steve Cronin, scronin@opisnet.com; Editing by
Frank Tang, ftang@opisnet.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 04, 2023 13:17 ET (18:17 GMT)
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