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A federal court has agreed to take up a key dispute in the legal saga that pits the State of Michigan against Enbridge Energy.
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The USACE announced in late June what will – and won’t – be evaluated in its Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on Enbridge's proposed Line 5 tunnel.
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Enbridge Energy said it’s disappointed that the timeline for its tunnel in the Straits of Mackinac has been pushed back.
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Federal officials are delaying a decision on whether to approve Enbridge energy's Line 5 oil pipeline tunnel in the Straits of Mackinac.
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A Michigan regulatory panel wants more information on Enbridge Energy’s plan to drill an oil pipeline tunnel beneath a channel linking two of the Great Lakes. The state Public Service Commission delayed a decision Thursday on the Canadian company's request for a permit to run a section of its Line 5 through the proposed tunnel.
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Recent national and international news about the Enbridge Energy's Line 5 pipeline may make it seem like the pipeline might shutter any day now, with major implications for winter fuel prices.But a year since Governor Gretchen Whitmer ordered the pipeline shuttered over safety concerns, its future is no clearer today than it was then.
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Despite describing an incursion on its Line 5 oil pipeline last month as “dangerous” and “criminal,” the pipeline operator Enbridge Energy did not file a report to the federal agency that tracks pipeline safety problems.
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Interviews with emergency response officials and a review of emergency dispatch records indicate the delayed reaction was a result of Enbridge taking the better part of an hour to tell dispatchers where the pipeline incursion was.
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The demonstrators said the Canadian energy company is operating the pipeline illegally.
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Michigan is trying to use courts to shut Enbridge Energy's pipeline in the Straits of Mackinac down.