Marsha Chartrand

Conflict looms for Whitmer, Nessel as Enbridge accelerates Line 5 tunnel plan

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Gov. Gretchen Whitmer speaks at the Detroit Regional Chamber’s annual policy conference this week on Mackinac Island. Whitmer said she continues to work with Enbridge Inc. on an agreement to speed up construction of a tunnel (Bridge photo by Lindsay VanHulle)

By Lindsay VanHulle, Bridge

MACKINAC ISLAND — Canadian energy giant Enbridge Inc. on Thursday announced it can finish a tunnel to house the controversial Line 5 oil pipeline in the Straits of Mackinac by 2024 at the earliest, shaving years off previous estimates.

Enbridge said in a statement that construction could start as soon as 2021, and the existing pipeline would be shut down as soon as the new one opened. The company originally said it would take seven to 10 years to build the tunnel, which was part of a deal negotiated with former Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican, last year.

Snyder’s successor, Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, told reporters Thursday that Enbridge’s accelerated construction estimate signals she and the company may be making progress toward more quickly replacing the aging twin pipelines beneath the Straits of Mackinac.

Yet Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, promised this week to take Enbridge to court if negotiations are unsuccessful, potentially by the end of June. Whitmer told reporters Thursday she wants to avoid litigation, citing the likelihood that it could take more time to get Line 5 out of operation.

“I am concerned that if we don’t have a date certain on when that pipeline comes out of the water, that the attorney general’s going to want to go to court, and I think going to court creates a lot of uncertainty,” Whitmer told reporters at the Detroit Regional Chamber’s annual policy conference on Mackinac Island.

“We could be locked in litigation for a long time,” Whitmer said. “Meanwhile, the pipeline stays in the bottom of the water. And that’s what I’m worried about.”

The Enbridge talks set up a potential conflict between Whitmer and Nessel on Line 5, as the Democrats take different approaches publicly on how to proceed. Nessel also broke with Whitmer this week related to a lawsuit questioning whether students have a constitutional right to literacy, saying she intends to file an amicus brief supporting Detroit’s schools, while a lawyer defending the state and Whitmer did not address the literacy question in seeking to dismiss the suit.

Whitmer and Nessel said they are working collaboratively, and share the goal of getting the Line 5 pipeline out of the water as quickly as possible.

“I wouldn’t characterize it as a disagreement” with Whitmer, Nessel told Bridge this week on Mackinac Island.

“We both have the same objective, and that is to get the oil out of the water as quickly as possible,” Nessel said. “We both feel very strongly about the notion that Line 5 is a constant threat to our state and that we are in jeopardy.

“The governor wanted an opportunity to negotiate with Enbridge, to see if they could agree to a very quick timeline in terms of getting Line 5 decommissioned,” Nessel said.

“Rather than enter the state into protracted litigation on this that could take quite some time, of course I want to provide her with the opportunity to see if she could negotiate something quickly. And I’ve given her that opportunity. And if those negotiations prove to be unsuccessful, then certainly, I plan to act.”

Whitmer began talking with Enbridge about speeding up the tunnel’s construction in April. She halted work on the tunnel plan in late March, following the release of an opinion from Nessel that a lame-duck law creating a tunnel oversight board is unconstitutional.

Enbridge last year signed agreements with Snyder’s administration to move forward on the tunnel project, citing the need to ensure availability of propane to meet energy needs of the residents of Northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula.

Line 5 is controversial in part because of its age, 66 years, and because of the risk — however small — that a rupture could cause a devastating oil spill in the Great Lakes. An anchor strike last year damaged parts of the pipeline. Environmental groups oppose the tunnel. Residents opposed to the tunnel protested on Mackinac Island during the conference this week.

“Enbridge has committed to construct the tunnel as quickly as prudently possible and to advance a number of additional protective measures while we construct the tunnel,” Enbridge’s statement said. “Given the attorney general’s opinion that the previous administration tunnel authority is invalid, Enbridge engaged and has continued to engage the state about alternatives to address that concern.”

The company said it “is prepared to invest $500 million to build this tunnel solution.”

Whitmer’s approach to Line 5 is more measured than it was during her campaign for governor last year. As a candidate, Whitmer vowed to file an injunction to shut down Line 5 on her first day in office. She opposed Snyder’s tunnel agreement with Enbridge, saying it would tie the hands of the next governor and she would challenge it in court.

On Thursday, she told reporters that her job is “to get the best deal that I can for the state” and lower energy costs for Upper Peninsula residents.

“The attorney general and I have been very close on this issue,” Whitmer said. “Dana Nessel is doing her job. I have a great deal of respect for Dana. She is smart, and she is tough, and we share the same goal of getting the oil out of the water. And I’m trying to make sure that we do it in a responsible way that protects our water and gets it done once and for all.”

Bridge reporters Riley Beggin and Jim Malewitz contributed to this report.

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