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Add your name to these public comments to be submitted to Michigan state agencies by signing this petition.

PLEASE NOTE! The State of Michigan has closed the comment period. You may still sign the petition here, but the State of Michigan will not recieve your comment.

OWDMTake Action Now

Last June, the preliminary Line 5 Alternatives Study was released, and more than 23,000 people submitted their comment calling for the shutdown of Line 5 as the only alternative that will truly protect the Great Lakes from an oil spill. The revised and final Alternatives Study has just been released, which has triggered a second comment period that is now open.

Prevent a Catastrophic Great Lakes Oil Spill

The deadline for public comments is December 22, 2017, so please sign on and submit your comment today via this online form. Let's prevent a devastating oil spill in the Straits of Mackinac.

To the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, Michigan Agency for Energy, Michigan Department of Natural Resources, Michigan Governor, Michigan Attorney General, and Michigan Pipeline Safety Advisory Board:

I am writing to submit my official comment in response to the State of Michigan’s Line 5 final alternatives analysis dated October 26 and released on November 20. I am deeply disappointed in this final analysis. A draft alternatives report released in June was riddled with errors and omissions, and the final report contains most of the same failures.

This report fails to meet its overall purpose of “providing the State of Michigan and other interested parties with an independent, comprehensive analysis of alternatives to the existing Straits Pipelines, and the extent to which each alternative promotes the public health, safety, and welfare and protects the public trust resources of the Great Lakes.”

It lacks credibility because its author is Dynamic Risk, a firm with ties to Enbridge, the Canadian energy transport company that owns Line 5. Even worse, it absurdly underestimates the impact of a spill and ignores a viable alternative to Line 5 – use of existing infrastructure. An independent expert review in December 2015 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. Moreover, this final alternative report affirms that decommissioning is a feasible option with zero risks to the Great Lakes and minimal economic impacts to Michigan customers (e.g., two cents more at the gas pump and roughly 10 to 25 cents more for propane in the Upper Peninsula). 
 
It is time for the state to reject the flawed study, exercise its affirmative legal duty as public trustee of the Great Lakes and bottomlands, and shut down Line 5. The state should use that authority to revoke the 1953 easement agreement that Enbridge has consistently violated.

The risk of a spill is too great to allow Line 5 to continue to operate in the Great Lakes. Our state government 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. In fact, on November 16, the Coast Guard Coast commandant testified again to Congress that his agency is not prepared to clean up a large-scale pipeline oil spill in the Great Lakes.

I urge you to act as public trustees of our waters and bottomlands, enforce the easement in light of Enbridge’s ongoing 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 a legal duty to take this enforcement action. Enbridge’s ongoing violations cannot be remedied. It is time for the state to act decisively and with urgency.

Specifically, the report on alternatives to Line 5 in the Mackinac Straits:

  1. Fails to follow the recommendations and standards outlined in the Michigan Petroleum Pipeline Task Force Report, which resulted from a process created by the governor and co-chaired by the attorney general, and therefore cannot be used by the State of Michigan “in making decisions about the future of the Straits Pipelines.”
  2. Neglects to provide the state with an independent, fair analysis of the alternatives to Line 5 as required by the Task Force Report. This final report remains biased toward allowing Line 5 to continue to operate and/or allowing Enbridge to build new oil infrastructure in the Straits of Mackinac and further expand its operations. That bias grows out of past, and potentially future, business relationships between Enbridge and the report’s authors.
  3. Fails to analyze existing pipeline infrastructure as an alternative to Line 5 in the Straits, which the state required Dynamic Risk to analyze, and leaving it out conflicts with Task Force recommendation 3 (b). It is unacceptable that the contractor eliminated this alternative without any analysis. The 1953 easement granted with strict conditions by the state to Enbridge does not guarantee transport of 540,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil and natural gas liquids. In fact, the 1953 MPSC Order states 300,000 bpd, which means Enbridge is currently operating Line 5 at 80 percent over design capacity. 
  4. Fails to analyze new evidence disclosed by Enbridge affecting the pipeline’s integrity, including external corrosion, 48 bare metal spots caused by the installation of screw anchors, compromised cathodic protection, and historic excessive pipeline spans greater than the 75-feet limit (including a 286-foot span that was unsupported for years), as required by the legal operating agreement with the State of Michigan. Dynamic Risk’s rationale, in part, is that "it would be inappropriate to speculate on any of the above aspects of the coating condition."
  5. Fails to consider tribal sovereign treaty rights and feedback on the basis that Dynamic Risk was not a party to tribal and state consultations, which is an unacceptable dismissal of input by a key stakeholder. 
  6. Grossly underestimates the total economic spill costs at between $147 million and $310 million, when Enbridge’s cleanup costs of its 2010 Line 6B pipeline oil spill along a 40-mile stretch of the Kalamazoo River cost more than $1.2 billion.
  7. 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 the Line 5 propane supply to the U.P.
  8. Continues to show an unfair bias towards building a tunneled pipeline in the Mackinac Straits. The report estimates a much lower cost for a tunnel 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. Dynamic Risk prefers 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.

 

5,363 COMMENTS
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Showing 3503 reactions

  • Madelyn Green
    signed 2017-12-21 15:44:50 -0500
  • John Erdevig
    signed via 2017-12-21 15:36:32 -0500
    The balancing of benefits and harms of shutting down Line 5 must take into account the minimal economic benefit of leaving this overaged piece of 1950’s engineering and outmoded environmental protection thinking, in place for any length of time, compared to the risk of a catastrophic and unmanageable oil spill in our pristine Great Lakes freshwater basins. Any homeowner knows that all pipes eventually leak, and this one is well past its prime and poorly maintained. Who takes responsibility here, in practical terms? Practically speaking, not Enbridge, not Dynamic Risk, and not their insurers. Only regulators. Don’t pass the buck, as happened with the Flint water source conversion, and Deepwater Horizon. Protect our irreplaceable water resources, and fisheries, tourism industry and riparian land values. Might as well, at this point, reflect via adequate regulation, just how costly fossil fuels are to the public at large, to taxpayers. Mind the “externalities” in your analysis. From subsurface to fuel oil tank, the cost is too great. Just move away from fossil fuel, one reasonable, indispensable regulation at a time, and don’t fret over this dinosaur of an industry. It’s like passing out cigarettes to GI’s, or getting off the train to shoot buffalo. This type of risk and ongoing pollution has no place in the 21st century.
  • Allison Hogikyan
    signed 2017-12-21 15:32:12 -0500
  • Elaine Frydrych
    signed 2017-12-21 15:26:15 -0500
    It is time to do the right thing! An ounce of prevention is worth a Great Lake full of cure!
  • John Ludy
    signed 2017-12-21 15:20:38 -0500
    This pipeline poses a public health and environmental risk to not only Michigan but the entire Upper Midwest. It should be stopped.
  • G B
    signed 2017-12-21 15:16:54 -0500
  • Val Lincoln
    signed 2017-12-21 15:15:30 -0500
    It is CRITICAL to END line 5. NOW!!!!!
  • Barbara Coye
    signed 2017-12-21 15:14:42 -0500
    Do it! End the danger to Michigan"s shoreline and economy! Now…not after it happens…as you know it WILL, sooner or later…
  • Catherine Daligga
    followed this page 2017-12-21 15:03:16 -0500
  • Emily Cybulla
    signed 2017-12-21 14:53:28 -0500
  • Virginia Maturen
    signed 2017-12-21 14:02:23 -0500
    What are you waiting for? The accident that’s going to happen. It’s just a matter of time. And the environmental and economic impact to upper Michigan (Pure Michigan?) will be beyond belief. It’s a death knoll for Michiganers. Please don’t wait. Take action now. Decommission Line 5. Tthank you.
  • Shelly Igrisan
    signed 2017-12-21 13:57:09 -0500
    Don’t take chances with the Great Lakes, Shut down Line 5
  • Andy Smith
    signed via 2017-12-21 13:30:13 -0500
    Take action. Be proactive. Protect our resources… not theirs. Water is more important to survival than a dollar.
  • jolynn davis
    signed via 2017-12-21 13:30:03 -0500
    I live on the lake ..shut it down why is this even a question?
  • Brooke Conklin1
    signed 2017-12-21 13:27:30 -0500
  • Melissa Kadri
    signed 2017-12-21 13:25:08 -0500
    Every oil pipeline bursts. Every single one. The world is moving away from oil, and we have to as well. We must stop putting profits over people, profits over health, profits over life.


    This pipeline is going to pass under the environmentally sensitive Straits of Mackinac, which connect Lake Michigan to Lake Huron. This will endanger the species living there as well as the humans living there. We don’t need this pipeline. It should be shut down.
  • Barbara J. Ginther
    signed 2017-12-21 13:17:57 -0500
    Our Great Lakes water is too valuable to take chances. Decomissiion Line 5 NOW! It is not safe. The draft report is full of errors and omissions and is not credible since the author has ties to Enbridge.
  • Cammie Cantrell
    @cammie408 tweeted link to this page. 2017-12-21 13:02:56 -0500
    JOIN ME and tell the State of Michigan the only acceptable way to protect the Great Lakes is to SHUTDOWN LINE 5. http://www.oilandwaterdontmix.org/submit_your_line_5_comment?recruiter_id=55961
  • Patricia Leonard
    signed via 2017-12-21 12:50:37 -0500
  • David Helps
    signed 2017-12-21 12:46:17 -0500
  • Corey Rolfe
    signed via 2017-12-21 12:21:48 -0500
  • richard scott
    posted about this on Facebook 2017-12-21 12:20:01 -0500
    JOIN ME and tell the State of Michigan the only acceptable way to protect the Great Lakes is to SHUTDOWN LINE 5.
  • richard scott
    signed 2017-12-21 12:18:37 -0500
    The comments above are reasonable. In my review of the ,enfthy proposal,by the Canadian firm inspecting the line I found some summaries which are suspect. That the lines have not been all thoroughly inspected and corrosion and weakening some secondary to the inadequate struts not installed is frightening. In any kind of risk management the company needs to ensure that they are funded and coverage for what the investigators consider remote. Accidents, failures and change I. Weather are not able to be accurately forecasted and errors that occur are always felt afterward to,have been remote. Hedging to protect all in Michigan with appropriate coverage is essential.
  • Brad Sovine
    signed via 2017-12-21 12:13:46 -0500
  • Ashley Tank
    @ashleytank tweeted link to this page. 2017-12-21 12:07:26 -0500
    JOIN ME and tell the State of Michigan the only acceptable way to protect the Great Lakes is to SHUTDOWN LINE 5. http://www.oilandwaterdontmix.org/submit_your_line_5_comment?recruiter_id=55954
  • Jon Seebeck
    signed via 2017-12-21 12:07:00 -0500
  • Ashley Tank
    signed via 2017-12-21 12:06:23 -0500
    This isn’t right. With everything going wr(on)g in our country today, surely you can understand that this might be one of he last decisions the American People get to make. Do make the wrong choice, I beg you. Dumping oil into our Great Lakes, is like tearing the break pads off of your car in the winter—only horrible things will come from it. Please, this is urgent, this is important, this is OUR water.
  • Brittany Petures
    signed 2017-12-21 12:01:54 -0500
    Protect our Great Lakes!
  • Meghan Baker
    signed via 2017-12-21 11:48:38 -0500
  • Gary Galbraith
    signed 2017-12-21 11:43:53 -0500

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