Minnesota regulators reaffirm approval for Enbridge Line 3 pipeline
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Minnesota regulators reaffirmed their support Monday for Enbridge Energy’s proposal to replace its aging Line 3 crude oil pipeline across the northern part of the state, while dozens of protesters walked out of the overflow hearing to make a point about climate change.
The Public Utilities Commission unanimously rejected a motion by opponents to reconsider its previous decision to grant a certificate of need for the project. And the commissioners agreed that Calgary-based Enbridge has met several conditions that they imposed when they approved the plan in June.
“Line 3 is a climate change disaster so we will stop Line 3,” several protesters in the main hearing room chanted early during the proceedings. Other opponents watching from an overflow room took up the chant and marched across the street to the Capitol, where they presented governor-elect Tim Walz’s staff with a recent gloomy UN report on climate change.
But the hearing continued, unlike a previous PUC hearing on the same issues in September that commissioners postponed until Monday after protesters disrupted it. Monday’s hearing was held in the Minnesota Senate Building, which has larger hearing rooms than the PUC’s headquarters, and it’s secured by state troopers, who were out in force.