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OIL AND GAS
Multi-agency pipeline safety panel set up in Michigan
by Daniel J. Graeber
Lansing, Mich. (UPI) Jun 27, 2013


Enbridge gets nod for Bakken oil pipeline from North Dakota
Houston (UPI) Jun 26, 2013 - Construction of the Sandpiper pipeline in North Dakota for Bakken crude oil is scheduled to start as early as Tuesday, Enbridge Energy said.

Enbridge, which has headquarters in Houston, said it received the necessary permits from the North Dakota Public Service Commission to start work on the Sandpiper pipeline as early as July 1. The pipeline should go into service in early 2016.

Enbridge Energy President Mark Maki said the pipeline could move more than 20 percent of all the oil produced from the Bakken reserve area in North Dakota.

"The economy in the region and nation overall continue to benefit from Bakken oil production," he said in a statement Wednesday. "This project will help get Bakken product to desirable markets, continuing to bolster economic growth."

North Dakota's economy is outpacing the rest of the nation in part because of oil production. Output from the Bakken area passed the 1 million barrel per day mark for the first time ever in April.

Sandpiper would stretch 616 miles from Tioga, N.D., through Minnesota and to an Enbridge terminal in Superior, Wisc. It would then transfer oil to other pipelines for delivery to the U.S. and Canadian refinery markets.

Michigan leaders said they formed a multi-agency safety panel to vet concerns about pipelines transporting petroleum products around the state.

Enbridge pipeline Line 6b ruptured in southern Michigan in 2010, resulting in one of the worst incidents of onshore oil pollution in U.S. history. Late last year, the company said it was sending another 50,000 barrels of oil per day through a 60-year-old pipeline that runs beneath the Mackinac Bridge in the Straits of Mackinac.

Michigan Department of Environmental Quality Director Dan Wyant and Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette announced they'd co-chair the Great Lakes Petroleum Pipeline Task Force to review pipeline concerns in the state.

"We're launching this pro-active effort to safeguard our natural resources by trying to avoid tragedy before it strikes," Schuette said in a statement Thursday. "The task force will serve as an advocate and voice for protecting the health, safety and welfare of Michigan citizens."

Formal oversight of oil and natural gas pipelines rests with the federal government.

In May, Wyant and Schuette issued an inquiry to Enbridge about the pipeline in the Straits of Mackinac.

Enbridge this week won approval from North Dakota to build an oil pipeline to the Wisconsin coast.

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House passes measure they say would lower gasoline prices
Washington (UPI) Jun 27, 2013
The House of Representatives passed a measure it says would help lower gasoline prices by expanding access to domestic energy resources. H.R. 4899, the so-called Lowering Gasoline Prices to Fuel an America that Works Act, passed through the House in a 229-185 vote Thursday, largely along party lines. The bill's supporters said it would help U.S. consumers and small businesses who ... read more


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