Line 5 shutdown ‘draconian,’ both sides must consider ‘imperfect’ alternatives: judge
WASHINGTON — A Wisconsin judge ordered a Canadian energy giant and a U.S. Indigenous band to water down their wine Monday and come together to avert the “draconian” shutdown of the cross-border Line 5 pipeline.
A compromise between Alberta-based Enbridge Inc. and the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Chippewa would be less than ideal, “particularly in the longer run,” District Court Judge William Conley said in a written opinion.
But on balance, Conley suggested, it would be better than the options before the court now: permanently severing a vital conduit between the two countries or courting an environmental disaster that may only be a matter of time.
The potential options the band has currently put before the court, if granted, would effectively amount to an “automatic, permanent shutdown” of the pipeline, the judge said.


