The Role of Line 5 in North American Energy Flow
Think of Line 5 as a forgotten artery in a much larger circulatory system. Built in 1953, it moves Alberta bitumen and Bakken crude from western Canada through Wisconsin, across the Michigan border, and into refineries near Sarnia, Ontario. This single pipeline supplies 65% of Michigan’s propane, heating homes in rural areas during brutal winters. The refined products then flow back into U.S. markets. Without it, refineries like Marathon’s in Detroit would need to reroute supplies—costly and logistically messy.
It’s not just volume. The pipeline’s location is strategic. It bypasses congested rail and truck routes, avoiding an estimated 140,000 additional tanker truck trips per year. That’s a lot of road wear, emissions, and accident risks. And while rail can move crude, it’s 2–3 times more expensive and slower. The issue remains: can alternative routes scale up fast enough? Maybe—but not overnight.
Line 5’s Operational Lifespan and Maintenance Record
Eighty years on steel? That sounds insane—except that Enbridge insists the pipe is in good shape. Regular inspections, cathodic protection, and over $500 million spent on upgrades since 2018. The company points to third-party audits and federal approvals. Yet critics highlight a 2018 anchor strike that dented the pipe, a 2020 leak in Wisconsin (unrelated but alarming), and over 29 reported incidents on Line 5 since 2000. A dent here, a crack there—small things until they aren’t.
The Mackinac Corridor: Why This Stretch Is Different
The Straits of Mackinac connect Lakes Michigan and Huron. The water is treacherous: unpredictable currents, ice cover in winter, and depths up to 270 feet. If a rupture occurred here, modeling suggests a spill could reach 720 miles of shoreline within weeks. The lakes hold 20% of the world’s surface freshwater. That changes everything. It’s not the Gulf of Mexico, where spills are horrific but somewhat expected. This is a pristine, shared ecosystem between two nations. And no cleanup method has proven effective for submerged pipeline oil in such conditions.
Immediate Consequences of a Line 5 Shutdown
Michigan would wake up to a new reality. Refineries might slow operations. Propane prices could spike—especially in the Upper Peninsula, where 70% of residents rely on it for heating. Some farms would struggle to fuel equipment. The state’s manufacturing sector, already tight on margins, might face delayed deliveries. But would it be doomsday? We’re far from it.
The bigger headache is for Enbridge. They have contracts. They’d owe millions in penalties if supply isn’t delivered. Their Line 6B reroute handles some volume, but not all. Canada’s Energy East project died in 2017. There’s no direct replacement ready. And because Line 5 moves both crude and refined products, it’s not just about feeding refineries—it’s about getting gasoline back to consumers. The domino effect starts fast: inventory drops, spot prices rise, panic buying creeps in. Remember 2021’s Colonial Pipeline panic? Similar vibe—except this one’s underwater and politically charged.
Supply Chain Ripple Effects Across the Midwest
Fuel distribution networks are more fragile than you think. Most terminals operate on a “just-in-time” model. If Line 5 vanishes, Wisconsin, Illinois, and even parts of Ohio could see temporary shortages. The Chicago area, home to one of the busiest fuel hubs in the U.S., would feel the pinch. Gas prices might jump 15–25 cents per gallon within two weeks. Not catastrophic—but painful at the pump.
Impact on Indigenous Communities and Local Economies
The Bay Mills Indian Community has sued to keep Line 5 open. Why? Jobs. Revenue. Infrastructure. Some tribal members work for Enbridge contractors. Others worry about energy costs doubling in winter. Yet the Little Traverse Bay Band opposes it fiercely, citing treaty rights and environmental stewardship. This isn’t a monolith. It’s a split community—caught between economic survival and cultural protection. And that’s exactly where the moral weight sits.
Enbridge’s Tunnel Proposal: A Fix or a Delay?
The company wants to bury a new pipe inside a 4-mile tunnel under the lakebed. Safer? Probably. But it’s taken nine years, $500 million, and endless legal fights just to get permits. Michigan’s former Governor Rick Snyder approved it. Gretchen Whitmer didn’t. Courts got involved. Canada even invoked a 1977 treaty. The project is now set for 2027—if it survives political shifts. Critics say it’s a shell game: same operator, same product, new tunnel. Supporters argue it’s the only viable long-term solution.
Here’s the irony: the tunnel would take years to build. If Line 5 shuts tomorrow, the tunnel won’t help. It’s a future bet, not a present fix. And because the current pipe is still functional (officially), shutting it feels abrupt to some, overdue to others.
Alternatives and Workarounds: Can We Adapt?
You don’t fix a pipeline crisis with a single move. It’s a chess game. Rail can move more volume—but only if you have enough tank cars and crews. Canada could redirect flows through other pipelines, like Line 3 (replaced in 2021) or the Trans Mountain expansion. But those systems are maxed out or export-bound. Trucking? Too expensive beyond short distances. Marine shipping? The Great Lakes aren’t built for massive oil tankers.
The only real alternative is redundancy. The U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve has 350 million barrels—but it’s for national emergencies, not regional supply issues. Private inventories? Limited. Michigan has no emergency fuel stockpile. It’s the only Great Lakes state without one. That’s a glaring gap.
Rail vs. Pipeline: A Cost and Risk Comparison
Rail moves oil at $10–15 per barrel. Pipeline? Around $5. So doubling transportation cost immediately hits consumers. And rail accidents—like the 2013 Lac-Mégantic disaster—show the dangers. One train can carry 70,000 barrels. Line 5 moves that every 15 minutes. To match daily flow, you’d need 38 trains. Every. Single. Day. The logistics are absurd. But because regulators demand diversification, some companies are investing in dual-mode terminals. Just in case.
Renewable Energy as a Long-Term Substitute?
Wind and solar can’t replace crude oil for heating or petrochemicals—not yet. But reducing demand through electrification and efficiency could ease pressure. Michigan aims for 100% clean energy by 2040. That’s ambitious. Until then, propane and gasoline stay relevant. The real shift won’t come from shutting down Line 5—it’ll come from making it obsolete. But that’s a 20-year game, not a 20-day fix.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Line 5 the Only Pipeline in the Great Lakes?
No. There are others—but none cross such a sensitive, high-current area. Line 78 runs through Indiana and Illinois but doesn’t touch open lake waters. Line 5’s location makes it unique. And that’s why it’s controversial.
Has There Ever Been a Spill from Line 5?
Not in the Straits. But in 2010, Line 6B (a sister pipeline) ruptured near Marshall, Michigan, spilling over 800,000 gallons into the Kalamazoo River. Cleanup took years and cost over $1.2 billion. It was the most expensive onshore oil spill in U.S. history. Residents reported health issues for years afterward. So when people say “it hasn’t failed here,” they’re technically right. But the family history is troubling.
Who Regulates Line 5?
Federally, it’s the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA). But Michigan asserts state authority under the 1953 easement, which Governor Whitmer revoked in 2021. Enbridge sued. Courts are still deciding. Canada claims the pipeline is protected under the U.S.-Canada Energy Transit Treaty. It’s a jurisdictional sandwich—federal, state, international. No wonder it’s stalled.
The Bottom Line
Shutting down Line 5 isn’t simple. It’s not “save the lakes” versus “crash the economy.” Reality is messier. I find this overrated—the idea that one pipeline defines a region’s fate. Yes, it’s important. But infrastructure fails all the time. We adapt. We reroute. We innovate. The real failure would be ignoring the need for better contingency plans, stronger oversight, and a clearer transition to lower-risk energy systems.
Data is still lacking on how quickly Michigan could shift to rail or imports. Experts disagree on the spill probability—one study says 83% chance in 100 years, another says less than 1%. Honestly, it is unclear. But we know this: steel buried under a lake for 70 years can’t last forever. Maintenance helps. Politics delay. And nature doesn’t negotiate.
So what should happen? Shut it down? Not yet. But force Enbridge to accelerate the tunnel. Mandate emergency fuel reserves. Invest in clean heating alternatives. And stop pretending this is just about one pipe. It’s about how we manage aging infrastructure in an era of climate risk. That’s the real story.
