DNR issues Environmental Impact Statement for Line 5 pipeline
Agency will now decide whether to allow construction of the controversial pipeline
MADISON, WI — Last Friday, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources released its long-awaited final Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the controversial Line 5 oil pipeline project. Calgary-based Enbridge, Inc. is seeking permits from the DNR that would allow the company to reroute its pipeline across 186 northern Wisconsin waterways and 612 acres of wetlands. The proposed route is upstream of Copper Falls State Park, posing devastating risks to the Bad River watershed, including the Bad River, Kakagon Sloughs, and Lake Superior.
The compilation of documents released by the DNR is a required environmental review of Line 5 under Wisconsin’s Environmental Policy Act and must be completed before the agency can issue construction permits to Enbridge. The permits would allow Enbridge to begin clearing trees, digging trenches and filling wetlands in northern Wisconsin to make way for the pipeline. On the federal side, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is also considering whether to issue permits allowing impacts to waters under its jurisdiction.
“The DNR’s Environmental Impact Statement came just one week after the deadline for public comments on the draft environmental review of Line 5 by the Army Corps. More than 150,000 people submitted comments critical of the reroute and that review. The Corps and DNR are expected to make permitting decisions in the coming months, and Clean Wisconsin will be ready to respond,” Korte says.
For more information on Line 5 and how you can get involved, visit Clean Wisconsin’s Line 5 web page.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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ENBRIDGE continues putting The Great Lakes at risk (largest fresh water source in the U.S.).
Additionally, Rivers, Tribal Lands and Wetlands.
Enbridge’s pipeline was responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the United States[75] in 1991, when 1,700,000 U.S. gal (6,400 m3) of oil ruptured from a buried pipeline in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, spilling crude into a wetland and a tributary of the Mississippi River.[75]Enbridge’s pipeline was responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the United States[75] in 1991, when 1,700,000 U.S. gal (6,400 m3) of oil ruptured from a buried pipeline in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, spilling crude into a wetland and a tributary of the Mississippi River.[75] From Wikipedia; read much more.