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US Army Corps grants emergency designation to Enbridge Line 5 Tunnel

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers granted Enbridge the national energy emergency status on Wednesday for its proposed tunnel for Line 5 pipeline, expediting a crucial federal permitting process.

As part of his emergency energy declaration of January 20, President Donald Trump ordered the Army Corps of Engineers to issue permits for the filling of wetland areas and the dredging of waterways or construction in them. This was to expand U.S. production of energy to meet the projected demand.

The Army Corps is a federal engineering agency that has the authority to approve projects involving waterways and wetlands.

The Army Corps' Detroit district stated in its public notice that the emergency permit request met Trump's executive orders because it addressed "an energy situation which would result an unacceptable risk to life, significant property loss, or immediate, unexpected, and significant financial hardship" if acted upon sooner.

Enbridge had submitted a plan to build an $750 million tunnel beneath the Great Lakes in 2023 to house the aging Line 5 oil pipe. However, the project was still awaiting Army Corps approval.

The Army Corps conducted an environmental impact analysis of the pipeline, with input from Native American tribes affected by it.

In February, the Army Corps posted a list with more than 600 projects that needed faster environmental approvals. However, this list was quickly removed.

The list has been removed from the website

Give the agency more time for project evaluation. (Reporting and editing by Chizu Nomiyama; Valerie Volcovici)

(source: Reuters)