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The US Army Corps has approved Enbridge's Line 5 Reroute in Wisconsin

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers approved the plan of Canadian company Enbridge to reroute an oil pipeline section around a Wisconsin tribe reservation.

The Army Corps (a federal engineering service) issued a permit to Enbridge on Wednesday to build a 41-mile section of pipeline around Bad River Reservation to replace an existing segment that crosses tribal land.

In 2019, the Bad River Band filed suit to remove the pipeline from its land. They cited concerns over treaty rights, and the potential risk of an oil spill on Indigenous people and their environment.

Enbridge submitted permits to state and federal regulatory agencies in 2020 for the Wisconsin Relocation Project. Enbridge's spokeswoman described the permit as a significant project milestone. However, construction cannot start until all state permits from last year have been confirmed.

Environmental groups and opponents of Line 5 have challenged these permits. They claim that Enbridge's plans don't adequately protect Wisconsin's waters.

Enbridge, which said it was confident that state permits would be soon confirmed, stated on Thursday.

Enbridge Line 5 is 645 miles of oil pipeline built in 1953. It carries oil through Michigan, Ontario and Wisconsin. The company plans to build a 4-mile-long tunnel in Wisconsin to house an aging section of pipeline which crosses the Straits of Mackinac on the Great Lakes.

The Army Corps has yet to approve Enbridge's project, which involves the construction of a $750-million tunnel to house the Line 5 oil pipeline. The Army Corps announced earlier this year that it would make a decision on the project this fall. Reporting by Amanda Stephenson, Calgary; editing by Chizu Nomiyama

(source: Reuters)