
Enbridge reaches US$177M settlement with U.S. Government for 2010 pipeline spills
CALGARY — Enbridge Inc. has reached a US$177-million settlement with the U.S. government six years after two major pipeline ruptures fouled rivers in the Midwest and damaged the company’s reputation.
The settlement announced Wednesday includes US$61 million in fines for violations of the Clean Water Act related to a pipeline spill near Marshall, Mich., that sent more than 3.19-million litres of crude into the Kalamazoo River — resulting in one of the costliest onshore oil spills in U.S. history.
Enbridge (TSX:ENB) has estimated cleanup costs for the spill that spread for 56 kilometres along the river to be about US$1.2 billion, including more than $551 million on response personnel and equipment and $227 million on environmental consultants.
The company has already repaid the government US$58 million for costs it incurred in the cleanup, and has agreed to pay at least an additional US$5.4 million for government costs not yet reimbursed.