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US Army Corps targeting fall decision for Enbridge Line 5 tunnel

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced on Friday that it will make a decision in the fall about whether or not to approve Enbridge's Great Lakes Tunnel for its Line 5 Oil Pipeline Project.

The Army Corps (a federal engineering service) released an updated timeline for permitting the project. This includes a 30-day period of public comments from May 30 until June 3 followed by a decision in the autumn.

The Army Corps is responsible for approving all U.S. projects that involve wetlands or waterways.

Enbridge's Line 5 Project received an emergency designation last month after President Donald Trump declared that a national energy crisis had occurred in his January executive order. This gave the Army Corps the power to expedite its review of the Enbridge project.

In an email sent on Friday, a spokesperson for Enbridge said that the company was encouraged by the new schedule.

The spokesperson stated that Enbridge had submitted the project permit application for the Great Lakes Tunnel Project to the state and federal regulatory agencies in April 2020, which is more than five year ago.

The project involves building a tunnel of approximately 4 miles (6 km) for Line 5, a 645-mile pipeline that runs through the Straits of Mackinac, in the Great Lakes. The pipeline transports more than 20,000,000 gallons per day of liquid natural gas and oil from Superior, Wisconsin to Sarnia in Ontario.

Enbridge has received approval from Michigan regulators to construct the $700 million tunnel to house the Line 5 oil pipeline, which is aging. The project will be completed in 2023. However, the Army Corps must still approve the project.

Native American tribes, environmental groups and other opponents of the project who are concerned about the Great Lakes' potential risks have refuted that the tunnel was needed or that there is a national emergency for energy.

(source: Reuters)