More of North Dakota's oil bounty will be flowing across northern Minnesota in the years ahead if a new $2.5 billion pipeline project wins approval.
Enbridge Energy, the Calgary, Alberta-based pipeline company that already owns five cross-state oil pipelines, recently disclosed details about its latest project -- a proposed 618-mile pipeline known as Sandpiper.
If completed, the Sandpiper would carry oil from the booming Bakken oil fields in western North Dakota, across Minnesota to Enbridge's terminal in Superior, Wis.
Coupled with Enbridge's existing pipelines and other expansion projects, the Sandpiper line would create the capacity to ship roughly half of North Dakota's projected oil output to Minnesota and Wisconsin in 2016.
"This is an encouraging step toward moving future production," said Justin Kringstad, director of the North Dakota Pipeline Authority, a state economic development agency that has worked to encourage pipeline development. The project will require approvals from state and federal regulators, which could take months.
North Dakota, which this year became the No. 2 oil-producing state behind Texas, had a record output of 701,000 barrels of crude oil per day in August and is forecast to exceed 1 million barrels per day by 2016.
Yet only 43 percent of that crude oil currently is shipped to market by pipelines. Enbridge's existing system brings oil to the company's oil terminal at Clearbrook, Minn., 95 miles east of Grand Forks, N.D. Much of the rest is shipped elsewhere in railroad tank cars, a more expensive method.
When the oil pipelines reach Clearbrook, they hit a bottleneck. Despite five eastbound pipelines owned by Enbridge to the company's large oil terminal in Superior, the company says it's short of capacity to deliver all the oil shippers want transported.