Calgary

Enbridge starts construction on Line 3 in Minnesota

Enbridge Energy began construction on its Line 3 crude oil pipeline replacement in Minnesota on Tuesday, a day after state regulators approved the final permit for the $2.6-billion project amid legal challenges from local activist and Indigenous groups.

On Monday, state regulators approved the final permit for the $2.6-billion project

In this 2017 file photo, fittings are ready to be added to the east leg of the Enbridge Line 5 pipeline in Michigan. The company Energy began construction on its Line 3 pipeline replacement in Minnesota on Tuesday. (Dale G. Young/Detroit News via The Associated Press)

Enbridge Energy began construction on its Line 3 crude oil pipeline replacement in Minnesota on Tuesday, a day after state regulators approved the final permit for the $2.6-billion US project amid legal challenges from local activist and Indigenous groups.

Spokeswoman Juli Kellner said Enbridge began construction in several locations around the state in the morning.

The Calgary-based company spent years pursuing permits for the project before the last one, a construction stormwater permit, was granted Monday by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

"Line 3 can now begin to be an economic boost for counties, small businesses, Native American communities, and union members," Kellner said in a statement. "The workforce will ramp up as construction continues eventually creating over 4,000 family-sustaining, mostly local construction jobs, millions of dollars in local spending and additional tax revenues at a time when Northern Minnesota needs it most."

Two tribes — the Red Lake and White Earth Bands of Chippewa — asked the PUC last week to stay its approval of the project, saying the influx of construction workers would put residents along the route at higher risk of COVID-19. A consolidated appeal by environmental and tribal groups is also pending before the Minnesota Court of Appeals.

Indigenous groups say pipeline threatens waters

Several activists and Indigenous groups filed a lawsuit Monday evening challenging the MPCA's permit approval, citing the pipeline's threat to waters where Native Americans harvest wild rice and negative effect on climate change.

Enbridge said replacing the deteriorating pipeline, which was built in the 1960s and runs at only half its original capacity, is the best option for protecting the environment while meeting the region's energy needs.

Kellner said Enbridge has enacted strict guidelines to guard against spread of the coronavirus, including testing workers regularly and repeatedly, requiring mask-wearing and social distancing and sanitizing work areas regularly.

In a statement on Tuesday, Winona LaDuke, executive director of Honor the Earth, said Enbridge will continue to see legal challenges from activists and Indigenous groups to "prevent this tar sands pipeline from ever being completed."

"As construction begins, some big questions need to be asked: What if the Appeals Court sides against Enbridge in the legal cases before it? What if the new Biden administration squashes this pipeline? What is Enbridge's plan if its workforce gets corona?" LaDuke said. "Its `safety' plan doesn't address what its workers do or where they go when they're not on the job."

Line 3 begins in Alberta and clips a corner of North Dakota before crossing Minnesota on its way to Enbridge's terminal in Superior, Wisconsin. The $5.3-billion US replacement segment in Canada, as well as segments in North Dakota and Wisconsin are already complete, leaving only the 542-kilometre stretch in Minnesota. Altogether, Enbridge expects to spend $2.9 billion US on the U.S. portion.