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In re Enbridge Energy, L.P.
In re Enbridge Energy, LP ↗
n/aMinn.1 entry
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
09/17/2019
Decision
Petitions for further review denied.
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The Minnesota Supreme Court <a href="https://mn.gov/commerce/energyfacilities/line3/">denied</a> petitions for further review of an appellate court decision finding all but one aspect of the environmental review for the Enbridge Line 3 oil pipeline project to be adequate. (The appellate court said the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission gave inadequate attention to the potential impact of an oil spill in the Lake Superior watershed.) The StarTribune <a href="http://www.startribune.com/minnesota-supreme-court-rejects-appeal-regarding-enbridge-s-new-2-9b-pipeline/560606962/">reported</a> that non-profit group Honor the Earth and the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe filed one petition, and Friends of the Headwaters filed another petition, each arguing that there were other shortcomings in the Public Utilities Commission’s review.
In re Enbridge Energy, LP ↗
A18-1283Minn. Ct. App.1 entry
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
06/03/2019
Decision
Commission's adequacy decision reversed and remanded.
The Minnesota Court of Appeals reversed the Public Utilities Commission’s determination that the final environmental impact statement (FEIS) for the proposed Enbridge Line 3 oil pipeline project was adequate. Although the court upheld the Commission’s conclusion that the consideration of many issues, including upstream greenhouse gas emissions, was adequate, the court found that the FEIS was inadequate because it did not address the potential impact of an oil spill into the Lake Superior watershed.
In re Enbridge Energy, L.P. ↗
PL-9/PPL-15-137Minn. PUC1 entry
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
In re Enbridge Energy, L.P. ↗
PL-9/CN-14-916Minn. PUC4 entries
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
11/21/2018
Decision
Order issued denying reconsideration, excluding filings, and granting variance.
On November 21, 2018, the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission denied petitions for rehearing of the Commission’s order granting a certificate of need for the replacement of the Enbridge Energy Line 3 crude oil pipeline. The Commission granted the certificate of need in a September 5, 2018 order, rejecting concerns raised by an administrative law judge about the replacement pipeline’s route, which would abandon the old pipeline in place.
09/05/2018
Decision
Order issued granting certificate of need as modified and requiring filings.
In an order granting the certificate of need for the replacement of the Enbridge Energy Line 3 crude oil pipeline, the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission rejected concerns raised by an administrative law judge about the replacement pipeline’s route, which would abandon the old pipeline in place. The Commission found that the consequences of granting the certificate of need would be more favorable than those of denying the certificate if the project were modified to require a removal program allowing landowners to choose to have the existing pipeline removed where feasible. In a discussion of potential climate change impacts in its September order, the Commission concluded that the project’s lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions would be “a significant consequence” but that the environmental costs did not result directly from the project but from “the continued demand for crude oil to produce refined products used by consumers.” The Commission found that record evidence did not support a conclusion that denial of the certificate of need would significantly reduce demand for crude oil. As a condition of the granting of the certificate of need, Enbridge must purchase renewable energy credits to offset the incremental increase in nonrenewable energy consumed by the project.
05/01/2018
Decision
Order issued finding environmental impact statement adequate and adopting ALJ's November 2017 report as modified.
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In re Enbridge Energy, L.P. ↗
OAH 65-2500-32764Minn. OAH1 entry
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
04/23/2018
Report And Recommendation
Findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommendation issued.
A Minnesota administrative law judge recommended that the Public Utilities Commission grant a certificate of need for a “replacement” oil pipeline but only if the Commission also required in-trench replacement. The applicant sought to abandon the existing line in place and build a new pipeline that would require a new pipeline corridor for approximately 50% of its route. The ALJ expressed concern that abandonment of the existing line and creation of the new corridor “leaves open the possibility of thousands of miles of … pipelines someday being abandoned in-place when they are no longer economically useful,” particularly “in a carbon-conscious world moving away from fossil fuels.” The ALJ’s decision also summarized the greenhouse gas analysis for the pipeline and found that the pipeline did not support Minnesota’s renewable energy and greenhouse gas reduction goals, but the ALJ’s ultimate recommendation did not turn on those issues.