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February 7, 2019

FLOW, Bay Mills Tribe, and Oil & Water Don't Mix Ask: Are Michigan’s Residents, Communities, and Businesses Insured if Line 5 Fails in the Straits?

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FOR IMMEDIATERELEASE:
February 7, 2019
Contacts:
Skip Pruss, Board Chair, FLOW (For Love of Water), (517) 930-4426, pruss@5lakesenergy.com 
Bryan Newland, Tribal Chairman, Bay Mills Indian Community, (906) 248-8100, bnewland@baymills.org 
David Holtz, Communications Coordinator, Oil & Water Don’t Mix, (313) 300-4454, david@davidholtz.org 

FLOW, Bay Mills Tribe, and O&WDM Ask: Are Michigan’s Residents, Communities, and Businesses Insured if Line 5 Fails in the Straits?
Investigation Reveals Critical Omissions and Finds Pipeline Might be Uninsurable
Traverse City, Mich. – If the 66-year-old Enbridge Line 5 pipelines fail in the Straits of Mackinac, residents, coastal communities, businesses, and the State of Michigan could be left with lasting environmental and economic damage and little or no hope for insurance coverage from pipeline-owner Enbridge for the oil spill, according to environmental and tribal organizations in a teleconference held today.
Michigan citizens may believe they are protected, at least at some level, by the insurance Enbridge should be required to have in place to pay the costs of cleaning up an oil spill disaster in the Straits, where Lake Michigan meets Lake Huron. Unfortunately, that may not be the case. 
A new FLOW investigation has revealed potential holes in Michigan’s financial protections against a Line 5 pipeline rupture into the Great Lakes. The potential shortcomings could prove ruinous to communities, residents, and businesses that suffer losses at the hands of a Line 5 oil spill in the Straits. The problems can be traced to last year when environmental regulators were largely sidelined by the Snyder administration, which negotiated four Line 5 agreements directly with Line 5-owner Enbridge from the executive offices of the governor. (See FLOW’s article about the investigation here.)

“The findings of our study suggest that Enbridge’s Line 5 oil pipelines in the Straits may never have been adequately insured and – given their age, location, and impaired condition – might be uninsurable,” said Skip Pruss, chairman of FLOW’s board of directors and an energy policy expert. “In its haste to sign agreements with Enbridge, the state during the end of the Snyder administration failed to conduct a study that would evaluate the financial capacity of Enbridge to address a worst-case scenario for damages and claims that may result from an existing Line 5 failure.”

The new revelations come as Governor Gretchen Whitmer has issued an executive order and new directives aimed at strengthening the state’s regulatory and administrative oversight capabilities for the Great Lakes, although Republican legislators are seeking to overturn the governor’s order in favor of delegating oversight in part to the businesses being regulated by the state.  

“While no amount of money can restore an oil-damaged fishery, the freshwater of the Great Lakes, or our cultural heritage, it simply is a dereliction of duty for the Snyder administration to not ensure that Enbridge has insurance that specifically covers oil spill damage and those tribes, communities, families, and businesses that would be harmed for generations to come,” said Bryan Newland, Tribal Chairman of the Bay Mills Indian Community.
A preliminary review raises many questions regarding the adequacy of Enbridge’s financial assurances that are supposed to mitigate the economic harm if Line 5 fails. Findings include that Enbridge’s:
·         General Liability insurance may not cover oil spill clean-up costs, natural resources damages and claims by injured third-parties.
·         Financial assurances are capped at $1.878 billion dollars, far less that the $6.3 billion estimate of worst-case damages determined by a study by Michigan State University, and a potential $45 billion loss to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product in after just 15 days from disrupting Great Lakes commercial shipping and steel production.
·         Enbridge Inc., the parent company, is not a signatory to the agreement relating to financial assurances; instead three Enbridge subsidiaries signed the agreement.  It is unknown whether these subsidiaries are insured.
·         The State of Michigan may not be named as an “additional insured” on the insurance policies.  If not, then the State of Michigan would have no direct right of recovery against an insurer. 
Based upon the preliminary review of the financial assurances intended to mitigate the present economic risks posed by a Line 5 failure and the ensuing questions and issues that have been identified by FLOW and independent insurance experts, the State of Michigan should:
·         Retain qualified experts to determine the adequacy of Enbridge’s financial assurances and to make appropriate recommendations regarding mitigating the magnitude of the financial risks posed by Line 5;
·         Determine to what extent the State of Michigan is bound by the indefinite and inadequate terms and provisions of the “Second Agreement;” 
·         Require Enbridge, Inc., to name the State of Michigan as an “additional insured” and/or “named insured” on its insurance coverage for Line 5; and
·         Seek the termination of operation of Line 5 until all financial assurance deficiencies are fully cured and satisfied.
“We are calling on the Whitmer Administration to investigate the apparent lack of insurance for an Enbridge Line 5 oil spill in the Straits and address the damage done by Snyder and lame-duck lawmakers before they rushed out the exit doors at the close of 2018, said David Holtz, Communications Coordinator, Oil & Water Don’t Mix. “It’s past time to shut down Line 5 before its delivers a direct hit to the very heart of the Great Lakes and the Pure Michigan economy.”
About FLOW and Oil & Water Don’t Mix: FLOW is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization based in Traverse City, Michigan, working to protect the common waters of the Great Lakes Basin through public trust solutions. FLOW is a leading legal and scientific voice, and a founding steering committee member of the broad-based, multi-year Oil & Water Don’t Mix (O&WDM) campaign dedicated to preventing a catastrophic oil spill from the decaying Line 5 pipelines that push 6 billion gallons of oil a year through the open waters of the Straits of Mackinac – the very heart of the Great Lakes. Learn more at www.FLOWforWater.org and www.OilandWaterDontMix.org.
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February 4, 2019

NEWS RELEASE: Clean air advocates applaud creation of Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 
Monday, Feb. 4, 2019

Contact: Nick Dodge, Byrum & Fisk Advocacy Communications, (517) 333-1606

Clean air advocates applaud creation of Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy

LANSING – Clean air and water advocates across the state today applauded Gov. Gretchen Whitmer for announcing the Department of Environmental Quality will be reorganized and replaced by a new Department of the Environment, Great Lakes and Energy [more details here].  Gov. Whitmer also announced Michigan will join the U.S. Climate Alliance to combat the impacts of climate change to Michigan communities, our air, Great Lakes and natural resources.

“Gov. Whitmer’s action sets a clear tone for how her administration is going to tackle climate change, protect the Great Lakes and our communities. We applaud Gov. Whitmer for taking a strong stance on climate change and fighting for our air, land, water and public health,” said Mike Berkowitz, legislative and political director for the Sierra Club Michigan Chapter.

"With the alarming recent climate reports from the world's top scientists and the rollbacks of our clean air and water protections at the federal level, urgent action on climate change is more important than ever. Today’s announcement shows that Michigan takes climate change seriously and aims to be a leader in promoting clean energy and fighting climate change," said Kate Madigan, director of the Michigan Climate Action Network

“Gov. Whitmer’s announcement is a step in the right direction toward reducing dangerous pollution in our Great Lakes, rivers, streams and drinking water and speeding up Michigan’s transition to clean, renewable energy. As the Great Lakes state, Michigan should be leading the way on combating climate change, and we applaud Gov. Whitmer for pushing our state to do better,” said Mary Brady-Enerson, Michigan director for Clean Water Action.

"The impacts of climate change are already hurting our families, industries, and natural resources across the state. More extreme weather like the recent life-threatening cold across the Midwest or Michigan’s historic flood of 2014 will only become more frequent,” said Ariana Gonzalez, senior policy analyst for the Natural Resources Defense Council. “With this announcement, Governor Whitmer and her administration are saying that we refuse to sit by idly as our health and economy are put at risk.”

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