Enbridge files to replace problem pipeline in Minnesota

By The Associated Press

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Enbridge Energy says it wants to build a second major crude oil pipeline across northern Minnesota.

The proposed pipeline would replace a 1960s-era line that has ruptured repeatedly. The Calgary, Alberta-based company says it intends to replace the entire pipeline, known as Line 3, that carries Canadian oil from Alberta to a storage terminal in Superior, Wisconsin. The pipeline operates at reduced capacity because of long-standing concerns about its integrity.

The Star Tribune (http://strib.mn/1wD8ziR) reports Enbridge asked the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission to approve its plans to contact landowners near the 338-mile-long corridor.

Enbridge also asked Minnesota regulators to reconsider their recent order that stretches out by a year the review of its other crude oil pipeline project — the proposed Sandpiper line to carry North Dakota oil across Minnesota.

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Information from: Star Tribune, http://www.startribune.com

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