Enbridge Gets Another Federal Tar Sands Crude Pipeline Permit As Senate Debates Keystone XL

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On January 16, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers gaveย Enbridge a controversial Nationwide Permit 12 green-lightย for its proposed Line 78 pipeline, set to bring heavy tar sands diluted bitumen (โ€œdilbitโ€) from Pontiac, Illinois to its Griffith, Indiana holding terminal.

The permitย for the pipeline with the capacity to carry 800,000 barrels-per-day of tar sands dilbitย came ten days after the introduction of S.1ย โ€” theย Keystone XL Pipeline Actย โ€” currently up for debate on the U.S. Senate floor, which calls for the permitting of the northern leg of TransCanada’s Keystone XL.ย 

Enbridge Line 78 Army Corps of Engineers Permit

Griffith is located just south of Whiting, Indiana, home of a massive refinery owned by BP. In November 2013, BP opened its Whiting Modernization Project, which retooled to refine up to 85-percent of its capacity as heavy dilbit from the tar sands, up from its initial 20-percentย capacity.

Legalย Challenge

In July 2014, environmental groups including the Sierra Club,ย National Wildlife Federation, Center for Biological Diversity andย Environmental Law and Policy Centerย submitted a letter to the Army Corps, requesting a fullย National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)ย review for Enbridge’sย proposal.ย 

As withย TransCanada’s Keystone XL southern leg,ย Enbridge’s Flanagan Southย and Enbridge’s Alberta Clipper expansion, Enbridge dodged a more democratic and transparentย NEPA reviewย from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and other executiveย agencies.

โ€œOnce again, the Corps has improperly segmented its approval of an Enbridge tar sands pipeline so as to avoid evaluating the project’s true environmental impacts or the impacts of the ongoing expansion of the Enbridge system,โ€ย Doug Hayes, staff attorney for the Sierra Club, toldย DeSmogBlog.ย 

TransCanada Energy Eastย Clone

Just as DeSmogBlog has called Enbridge’s north-to-south dilbit pipeline network a โ€œKeystone XL Clone,โ€ Enbridge has quietly proposed and is currently permitting into existence a clone of TransCanada‘s controversial Energy Eastย dilbitย pipeline.ย 

According to the map of Line 78 on Enbridge’s website, the pipeline will connect with Line 6Bย in Griffith. Line 6B is infamous for the biggestย dilbitย pipeline spill in U.S. history. Taking place in Kalamazoo, Michigan, environmental activists and advocates now refer to the 1 million+ barrel spill as the โ€œdilbit disaster.โ€

Line 6B will then connect with Enbridge’s proposed Line 9 Reversal project (also known as the Eastern Canadian Refinery Access Initiative), which will bring tar sandsย dilbitย to Canada’s east coastย โ€” like Energy Eastย โ€”ย for potential export.ย 

Declaration ofย Money

Sierra Club,ย National Wildlife Federation and the Center for Biological Diversity, 350 Minnesota, Honor the Earth, Indigenous Environmental Network and others alsoย suedย the U.S. State Department on November 12ย in an ongoing lawsuit for what they say was a violation of NEPA with regards to theย State Department’s covert approval of the Alberta Clipper expansion project.

Enbridge requested to enter the case as an intervenorย and theย magistrate judge for the case recently accepted the request. Enbridge and the State Departmentย have until January 30 to respond to the initial legal complaint.ย 

As perhaps a foreshadowing of things to come,ย Robert Kratschย โ€” a manager of design and construction for Enbridge and the lead point of contact for the Alberta Clipper expansion proposalย โ€” submitted a crucial legal memo in support of Enbridge’s interventionย on Decemberย 5.

In so doing, Kratsch echoed the judge’s ruling in the NEPA lawsuit filed by environmental groups against the Army Corps of Engineers as it pertains to Keystone XL South.ย 

After spending nine paragraphs explaining what the pipeline is and does, Kratsch delivered his knock-out blow, stating that nullifying the Alberta Clipper expansion project would put a damper on the company’s potential corporateย profits.

Enbridge Corporate Profits

Image Credit: U.S. District Court, District ofย Minnesota

Judgeย Ketanji Brown Jackson, an Obama appointee, agreed with this line of argumentย by TransCanada for Keystone XL South. Will Judgeย Michael J. Davis, a Bill Clinton appointee and designated judge for the Alberta Clipper expansion legal dispute, do theย same?

With the Alberta Clipper expansion pipeline legal dispute ongoing and a legal challenge to Line 78 highly possible, one thing remains certain: if the past serves as prologue, corporate profits earned and potential loses will serve as the centerpiece for Enbridge’s legal argument goingย forward.ย 

And as a recentย article written by Boston College Law School professorย Kent Greenfield (author of the bookย โ€The Failure of Corporate Law: Fundamental Flaws and Progressive Possibilitiesโ€)ย explains, these dynamics have played out for almost aย century.

โ€œThe eventual decision was, and still stands for, an iconic statement that corporations have no obligations beyond the bottom line,โ€ Greenfield wrote in pointing to the landmark 1919ย Dodge v. Ford Motor Co. decision handed down by the Michigan Supreme Court. โ€œCourts, then and nowโ€ฆdid not, and still do not, typically overturn the considered decisions of corporateย managers.โ€

Image Credit:ย Imilianย | Shutterstock

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Steve Horn is the owner of the consultancy Horn Communications & Research Services, which provides public relations, content writing, and investigative research work products to a wide range of nonprofit and for-profit clients across the world. He is an investigative reporter on the climate beat for over a decade and former Research Fellow for DeSmog.

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