Canada Escalates Michigan Pipeline Battle

The Canadian government has invoked oil and gas transit rights under a decades-old treaty with the US to stop Michigan’s attempt to shut down an Enbridge Inc pipeline under the Great Lakes.

 

A 1977 agreement states Canada and the US must allow natural gas and crude oil to flow between the two countries, according to a statement on the 4th October from Foreign Minister Marc Garneau. More than 540,000 barrels per day flow through Line 5, which provides half the oil and propane used in Ontario and the US Midwest.

 

“In response to Michigan’s efforts to shut down Line 5, Canada has raised its significance for Canadian economic and energy security at the highest levels of the US federal government,” Mr Garneau said.

 

By using the treaty, Canada is seeking to delay court decisions on the pipeline while the two countries negotiate. Enbridge shares rose 1% in New York on the 4th October.

 

The move comes weeks after court-ordered mediation efforts between Enbridge and the Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer collapsed. The governor ordered the Calgary-based company to stop using the pipeline in May due to environmental concerns, but the oil continues to flow.

 

Ms Whitmer argues the pipeline is particularly vulnerable to spills in the Straits of Mackinac as it was first built in 1953. Enbridge has proposed building a tunnel to house a new section of pipeline in an effort to reduce its environmental risk.

 

“Canada supports Enbridge’s plan to replace the existing pipeline with the proposed Great Lakes Tunnel Project, which will run far below the lakebed of the Straits of Mackinac, to further protect the Great Lakes,” Mr Garneau said.

 

Ms Whitmer said in a statement she was “profoundly disappointed” in Canada’s decision to use the treaty. “Rather than taking steps to diversify energy supply and ensure resilience, Canada has channelled its efforts into defending an oil company with an abysmal environmental track record,” she said.

 

Source: Rigzone