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US Judge blocks Michigan from enforcing an order to shut down Enbridge Line 5 oil pipeline

A U.S. Judge on Wednesday prevented Michigan from enforcing an 2020?order that would have shut down Enbridge’s Line 5 oil pipeline running underneath a channel? linking two of the?Great Lakes. The judge ruled that pipeline safety was a federal responsibility.

This decision was made five years after Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer revoked a easement allowing Canadian firm Enbridge to operate?a 6.4 km (4 mile) stretch of aging pipe beneath the Straits of Mackinac that connects Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. Whitmer cited risks to the?environment if there were a spill.

Enbridge has fought the Michigan decision in court. The 72-year old pipeline, which transports 540,000 barrels of crude and refined products per day from Superior, Wisconsin to Sarnia in Ontario, has continued to run throughout the dispute.

Robert Jonker, U.S. district judge, ruled in his ruling that the United States is responsible for the safety of pipelines and the protection of the Straits of Mackinac, and Michigan has no authority to intervene.

Enbridge?faces ongoing challenges in relation to Line 5. Enbridge?faces other ongoing challenges related to Line 5.

In April, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (a federal agency that oversees permits) granted national energy?status? to the Line 5 Tunnel Project, allowing it to expedite a critical permitting process. Reporting by Amanda Stephenson, in Calgary; Ryan Patrick Jones, and Bhargav Asharya, in Toronto; editing by Rod Nickel.

(source: Reuters)