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Michigan’s year-long study of Line 5 alternatives has been released. Now is the time to submit your comment calling for the only way to truly protect the Great Lakes from an oil spill: decommission the Enbridge Line 5 pipelines through the Straits of Mackinac.
Protect the Great Lakes from a Catastrophic Oil Spill
Deadline for comments is August 4, so please submit yours today via this online form in support of protecting the Great Lakes from a catastrophic oil spill.
To the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, Michigan Agency for Energy, Michigan Department of Natural Resources, and Office of the Attorney General:
I am writing to submit my official comment in response to the State of Michigan’s Line 5 alternatives analysis. This report was expressly commissioned for the overall purpose of “providing the State, Enbridge and the public with information that can be used to help guide decisions for the future of [Line 5 in the Straits].”
I am deeply disappointed in this analysis and this process riddled with conflict of interest. It lacks credibility because Dynamic Risk, a firm with ties to Enbridge, is its author. Even worse, it absurdly underestimates the impact of a spill and ignores a viable alternative to Line 5 – use of existing infrastructure. An expert review in December 2015 by advisors to a Great Lakes policy organization documented the practicality of this alternative.
Decommissioning Line 5 in the Straits of Mackinac is the only alternative that will prevent an oil spill with catastrophic consequences for the Great Lakes and the State of Michigan. It is time for the state to stop delaying action with flawed studies, exercise its legal duty as public trustee, and shut down Line 5. The state should use that authority through enforcement of its easement, an agreement that Enbridge has consistently violated.
Specifically, the draft report on alternatives to Line 5 in the Mackinac Straits:
- Fails to follow the recommendations and standards outlined in the Michigan Petroleum Pipeline Task Force Report and should be withdrawn.
- Neglects to provide the state with an independent, fair analysis of the alternatives to Line 5. This report is clearly biased toward allowing Line 5 to continue to operate and/or allowing Enbridge to build new oil infrastructure and further expand its operations. That bias grows out of past, and potentially future, business relationships between Enbridge and the report’s authors. Clearly, the authors are not “wholly independent from any influence by Enbridge,” a standard for establishing credibility in the report’s findings that is outlined in the Task Force Report.
- Ignores using existing pipeline infrastructure as an alternative to Line 5 in the Straits, which was one of the alternatives the state required Dynamic Risk to analyze, and leaving it out is in conflict with Task Force recommendation 3 (b). It is unacceptable that the contractor eliminated this alternative in the early stages of analysis, and this must be remedied in the final report.
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Does not provide a worst-case scenario spill and cost analysis, which was one of the main objectives of this report and was specifically required by the state in its request for proposals under Section II-B. Instead, Dynamic Risk uses assumptions of risk that are woefully inadequate and are not credible. It estimates that:
- Only 20-miles of shoreline would be impacted by a spill. This is 3% of the 720-mile area the University of Michigan found vulnerable to a spill in its 2016 study.
- An oil spill would cost $100 to $200 million when Enbridge’s cleanup costs of its Kalamazoo River Line 6B pipeline oil spill in 2010 cost more than $1.2 billion.
- Overestimates an impact to propane supply, greatly exceeding what independent experts have determined would be necessary to provide the Upper Peninsula’s Rapid River facility with an alternative supply. The flawed report finds that up to 35 railcars per week or 15 truckloads per day would be necessary, while another study found it would take only one railcar or 3 - 4 truckloads per day to replace Line 5 propane supply to the U.P.
- Shows unfair bias towards building a tunneled pipeline. The report estimates the cost of a tunnel much lower than other estimates for this type of infrastructure; it fails to consider the risk of a spill to the Great Lakes, rivers and streams from other portions of the 64-year-old pipeline if the Straits portion were rebuilt; and it fails to look at the other health and environmental consequences of allowing Enbridge to build a tunnel and further expand its transport of mostly Canadian oil through Michigan for export. Dynamic Risk has a preference for new pipelines, which was evident when the firm aggressively promoted building a tunnel in its proposal to do this report, and its analysis is deeply flawed.
The magnitude of the risk of a spill is too severe to allow Line 5 to continue to operate in the Great Lakes. Michigan should not put the Great Lakes, our economy, health, drinking water, fisheries, and way of life at risk from a catastrophic oil spill any longer.
I urge you to act as legal public trustees of our waters and bottomlands, enforce the ongoing easement violations, and begin the process of decommissioning Line 5 in the Straits of Mackinac to protect the Great Lakes from a catastrophic oil spill. The State of Michigan has an independent legal duty to take this enforcement action based on Enbridge’s ongoing violations.
Please note that submitting your public comment here has nothing to do with the Line 5 ballot proposal that is being circulated.
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Comment on Alternatives Analysis for Straits Pipelines
Dear Sir/Madam:
I am not an engineer nor a scientist. I recognize the importance of those disciplines in determining the feasibility of construction projects and their associated costs, benefits and risks. However, I believe the decision determining what happens with the oil pipelines laid across the bottom of the Straits of Mackinaw is essentially a political one. And, while economics, markets, machinery and models may inform such a decision, something more fundamental also is at stake. That is, how humankind continues to calculate its “right” to use/abuse the gifts of this Earth that are essential to all human survival, both now and in the future. That is clean air, fresh water and healthy soils.
For the past sixty-plus years, we in Michigan have borne the risks of the Straits pipelines without major incident. And yes, there are some direct benefits to people in the state. But most of the value that the pipelines carry cuts through our state and flows to those in other states and countries. The Enbridge pipeline rupture near the Kalamazoo River demonstrated irrefutably to us the inherent human weakness and steep environmental costs in operating any such system over time, no matter how sophisticated the technology. So how much longer are we to bear the risk of such a dreaded failure in the Straits? Since you are scientists, try thinking in terms of exponentially greater damage than the Kalamazoo.
You believe companies and individuals in the business of constructing, designing, maintaining and promoting such infrastructure are going to be able to provide you with an accurate number for that risk? Why then did the state cancel the economic impact study that was to accompany this Alternatives report? Why have other conflict of interest allegations been made regarding this study? Why did the State Task Force have to redirect those doing this report because they’d gone off course, from the beginning, in adhering to the tasks at hand? And, since this study purports to weigh the views of unbiased and disinterested parties, why is there is there such a yawning gap between its risks and damage assessments and those made by the University of Michigan’s Water Center?
You may think it outside your purview to consider the larger context in which this assessment is being made. But I happen to think it’s a perfect opportunity to put in perspective the need to cut back fossil fuel dependence and to bear some of the immediate costs, in terms of adjustments to our “way of life” and to begin to offset the effects of climate change in our lifetimes rather than pass the whole muddle off to future generations. I, for one, would be glad to pay a few cents more for gasoline, for instance, if it would insure that the piping of crude oil across the bottom of the Mackinaw Straits would stop.
Respectfully,
Robert E. Allen
Traverse City, MI
Our water means LIFE!
Humans and Wildlife…
PROTECT….us all!
Water is a vital resource. Please understand that it does not mix with oil. Twenty percent of the WORLD’S fresh water is in the Great Lakes. Take care of your resources. Take care of what God gave us. Shut down Line 5.