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Enbridge warned about corrosion monitoring

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. — A subsidiary of Canadian energy transport giant Enbridge whose pipeline leaked hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil into a major Michigan river was warned by government regulators in January that its monitoring of corrosion in the pipeline was insufficient.

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. — A subsidiary of Canadian energy transport giant Enbridge whose pipeline leaked hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil into a major Michigan river was warned by government regulators in January that its monitoring of corrosion in the pipeline was insufficient.

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration told Enbridge Energy Partners chairman Terry McGill in a Jan. 21 letter that its corrosion monitoring in Line 6B did not comply with federal regulations.

The Environmental Protection Agency, which has taken control of efforts to contain and clean up the Kalamazoo River spill, said late Wednesday that it believes more than 3.8 million litres of oil leaked from a pipeline into Talmadge Creek, which feeds the river. Calgary-based Enbridge Inc. (TSX:ENB), the parent company, had estimated that three million litres spilled Monday before they could stop the leak.

Enbridge spokeswoman Lorraine Grymala said Thursday she has no comment about the Jan. 21 letter.

By late Wednesday, the oil had travelled at least 55 kilometres downstream from where it leaked in Calhoun County’s Marshall Township, killing fish, coating other wildlife and emitting a strong, unpleasant odour.

It had passed through Battle Creek, a city of 52,000 residents about 175 kilometres west of Detroit, and was headed toward Morrow Lake, a key point near a Superfund site upstream of Kalamazoo, the largest city in the region. Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm has warned of a “tragedy of historic proportions” should the oil reach Lake Michigan some 80 miles away, and the vacation communities that depend on it.

State and company officials had said earlier this week they didn’t believe the oil would spread past a dam at the lake, and that they would be able to contain it there.

But Tom Sands, the deputy state director for emergency management and homeland security, said during a conference call with Granholm on Wednesday that he had seen oil that had made it past the dam while he was flying over the area.

On Thursday, EPA spokesman Mick Hans said its incident commander was in the same plane as Sands and wasn’t convinced oil had passed the dam. Hans said the EPA, however, wasn’t trying to take issue with the report.

“We’re all working together,” Hans said. “Sometimes you get different technical interpretations.”

The company’s latest update statement Wednesday said oil was about 11 kilometres short of the opening to Morrow Lake.

Granholm on Wednesday called on the federal government for more help, saying resources being marshalled by the EPA and Enbridge were “wholly inadequate.”

Enbridge said Wednesday and Thursday that it was ramping up its efforts to contain and clean up the mess. Chief executive Patrick Daniel said the company had made “significant progress,” though he had no update on a possible cause, cost or time frame for the cleanup.

Workers and contractors were using vacuum trucks and absorbent booms to contain and clean the spill, and the company was bringing in more help, Enbridge spokeswoman Lorraine Grymala said Thursday.

“We’re getting them here as quickly as we can,” Grymala said.

The overall workforce on the spill Wednesday was likely more than 400 people. EPA officials said they’re ramping up efforts with air and water testing. Local officials said they weren’t concerned about municipal water supplies.

The spill has killed fish and coated wildlife. Both company and EPA officials have said oil is no longer leaking, but the spill’s size was considerable. An three-million-litre spill would be enough to fill four-litre jugs lined side by side for nearly 110 kilometres. It also could fill a walled-in football field, including the end zones, with just under 60 centimetres of oil.

Granholm has declared a state of disaster for some areas along the river, and President Barack Obama called Granholm to offer federal support.

Anil Kulkarni, a mechanical engineering professor at Penn State University, said a quick response was vital to the river’s ecology. Snails, frogs, muskrats and even birds eat, live and nest on or near the riverbank.

“The river banks are nearby. It has more potential to inflict damage because of the proximity to land. Anything that comes in contact with oil is going to be affected badly. It prevents the natural life of species, whether it’s collecting food or anything else.”

Enbridge-related companies have been cited several times in recent years for violations in the Great Lakes region.

Houston-based Enbridge Energy Co., spilled almost 72,000 litres of crude oil onto Wisconsin’s Nemadji River in 2003. Another 715,000 litres of oil spilled at the company’s terminal three kilometres from Lake Superior, though most was contained.

In 2007, two spills released about 758,000 litres of crude in northern Wisconsin as Enbridge was expanding a pipeline. The company also was accused of violating Wisconsin permits designed to protect water quality during work in and around wetlands, rivers and streams, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources said. The violations came during construction of an oil pipeline across that state. Enbridge agreed to pay $1.1 million in 2009.

The Michigan leak came from a one-metre pipeline, which was built in 1969 and carries about 30 million litres of oil daily from Griffith, Ind., to Sarnia, Ont.

An 130-kilometre segment of the river that begins at Morrow Lake and five miles of a tributary, Portage Creek, have unsafe levels of PCBs and were placed on the federal Superfund list of high-priority hazardous waste sites in 1990. The Kalamazoo site also includes four landfills and several defunct paper mills.