Pipe dreams leave U.S. energy firms caught in climate trap
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[November 23, 2020]
By Stephanie Kelly, Devika Krishna Kumar and Jessica Resnick-Ault
NEW YORK (Reuters) - In remote northern
Michigan a propane shortage in early 2014 caused prices to nearly
double, squeezing about half of the families there who rely on the
fossil fuel to heat their homes.
Glenda Bowler remembers her son fitting a wood stove at his restaurant
as an alternative to propane, which reaches Michigan's Upper Peninsula
via a 645 mile (1038 km) pipeline.
"Everybody's thermostats got turned down, and you turned to
supplemental, like wood or electric to help. I'm old, so I can't go cut
wood," the 68-year-old said.
Now the future of the Enbridge Inc owned line supplying the region is
under threat, as climate activists widen their campaign to cut U.S.
fossil fuel dependency from new pipelines to the refurbishment or
expansion of older ones.
"To speed up the extraction of what remains is an insane strategy
because we need to have something that replaces that energy source in
the future and we don't have it as long as people are continuing to rely
on oil," Anne Woiwode, co-chair of the Sierra Club's Michigan chapter,
said.
But as authorities worldwide face the challenge of a smooth transition
to a lower-carbon future, energy firms are wrestling with investment
decisions to keep their businesses running and prevent supply
disruptions.
Enbridge had to temporarily close its Line 5 this summer after damage
was discovered, boosting calls for the 67-year-old line carrying crude
oil, propane and liquid fuels to Canada through the sensitive Straits of
Mackinac, to be shut down.
Nearly half the oil and gas pipeline miles that crisscross the United
States are at least 50 years old. And even though the world's largest
fuel consumer is starting to rely more on renewables, fossil fuels still
provide almost all of its road fuel and natural gas accounts for about
40% of electricity generation.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer this month revoked a decades-old
easement allowing the Enbridge line to operate, saying that its location
and age means it poses a major risk and vowing to shut it after a
transition period.
Roughly 43% of pipeline miles for hazardous liquids, which includes
crude oil, were installed pre-1970, while 55% of gas transmission
pipeline miles were installed before 1970, according to the U.S.
Department of Transportation.
BLOCKING PIPELINES
Climate activists, Native tribes, and local opponents have waged
years-long battles to prevent construction of pipelines with some, like
Keystone XL, a 830,000-barrel-per-day crude expansion project, still in
limbo after more than a decade.
Although the $8 billion Atlantic Coast Pipeline project, once the
largest gas line under construction, was canceled this year, the Dakota
Access LLC oil pipe and other large crude pipelines from Texas have been
completed in recent years.
If existing pipelines are shut, suppliers could be forced to transport
fuel and gas to consumers by rail or road.
Pipelines moved 4.4 billion barrels of foreign and domestic crude oil to
refineries in 2019, while rail cars accounted for just 123.6 million
barrels, or 3% of pipeline volumes, and trucking was about 2.4% of
pipeline volume, U.S. Energy Information Administration data showed.
In Michigan, Sean McBrearty, a coordinator for Oil and Water Don't Mix,
said the Enbridge pipeline is not needed to supply the region and that
train cars or truckloads could replace it.
But analysts at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. estimate it would take 30
trucks and half a unit train each day to haul the 40,000 barrels per day
of propane that Line 5 usually supplies.
And Jim Mankervis, supervisor in Ishpeming Township, a 3,500-person
community on the Upper Peninsula, doubts this is viable.
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An activist opposing the Enbridge Line 3 oil pipeline, dangles from
a steel structure erected outside the Minnesota Public Utilities
Commission office in St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S., June 28, 2018.
REUTERS/Rod Nickel/File Photo
"I don't know that they could even get enough trucks to supply the
(Upper Peninsula) with propane," he said.
Switching Upper Peninsula customers to an alternative fuel source,
like natural gas, would be far from simple.
Separate lines are required from those that carry liquid fuels like
propane, so a new right-of-way would be needed.
End users like homes and businesses would need to switch their own
tankage and private pipes to the new fuel, at a greater cost than
paying more for propane that is trucked in.
One solution agreed by Michigan's former governor with Enbridge was
to encase the existing pipeline to prevent the line from polluting
the water supply.
Enbridge estimates the project, due to be completed in 2024, will
cost $500 million, said Ryan Duffy, Enbridge spokesman.
"More people see it is a common sense solution to protect the
environment and make what has been a safe pipeline even safer, and
then also continue to make sure that energy is delivered to the
people in the state that really do rely on that," Duffy told
Reuters.
PRICE IMPACT
The Atlantic Coast gas pipe would have added an additional pipeline
to deliver gas to residents of the southeast, including North
Carolina and Virginia, from West Virginia.
In the winter, most of the gas there is used by homes and businesses
for heat, leaving less for industries and power plants during the
coldest times of year, and utility companies say the pipeline's
cancellation could drive up prices.
"We'll be able to meet the needs of our customers, but we're going
to have to do it in a way that is a little more expensive and has a
little more reliability concerns," Rayhan Daudani, a spokesman for
Dominion Energy's Virginia Power utility, said.
Other proposed expansions of existing pipelines in North America
face national or local opposition, including TC Energy Corp's
Keystone XL in Alberta, Energy Transfer's Mariner East in
Pennsylvania and Kinder Morgan Inc's Permian Highway in Texas.
The U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs in July ordered Andeavor/Tesoro,
now owned by Marathon Petroleum, to stop using a pipeline flowing
out of North Dakota and invoiced the company $187 million for
trespass on Native American land.
Marathon said this month that the trespass order and damages had
been canceled, although a new court decision was expected by Dec. 15
This line is nearly 70 years old and its latest easement agreement
with the landowners expired in 2013. While it is still operational,
the dispute could result in a portion being closed.
While pipeline opponents have become focused on older pipelines,
even new ones have problems. Keystone, which moves Canadian crude to
the Midwest, has twice leaked thousands of barrels, even though it
is about 10 years old.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly, Devika Krishna Kumar, Jessica Resnick-Ault;
Additional reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by David Gaffen and
Alexander Smith)
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