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State of Michigan announces $75 million settlement with Enbridge over Kalamazoo River oil spill

Listen to the broadcast version of this story.

Today, the state of Michigan announced a settlement with Enbridge Energy over the largest inland oil spill in American history.

The state’s $75 million consent judgment with Enbridge won’t be coming as a huge cash payment. Most of the money has already gone to, or will be going to river restoration or recreation projects along the Kalamazoo River.

The state will receive a $5 million dollar “mitigation payment” as part of the settlement.

You can read the consent judgment here.

Here’s how the $75 million settlement with Enbridge breaks down:

Money already spent by Enbridge:

  • $18 million spent by Enbridge to remove the Ceresco Dam and restore the historical flow to that part of the river.
  • $10 million spent to construct and improve recreational and boating access sites for the public at five locations and provide an endowment for perpetual maintenance of these sites.
  • $12 million paid in reimbursement of the state’s costs in conducting and overseeing cleanup work, restoration and mitigation, and attorney’s costs.

Money to be spent by Enbridge:

  • $5 million "mitigation payment" to the state for additional enhancement and restoration of the Kalamazoo River, to be paid within 30 days of the entry of the agreement.
  • $30 million as estimated costs for Enbridge to restore or construct 300 acres of wetlands in the watershed for permanent protection.


This settlement with Michigan closes another chapter in the long story of the 2010 Kalamazoo River oil spill.

It’s been almost five years since Line 6B ruptured near Marshall and polluted Talmadge Creek and 38 miles of the Kalamazoo River with heavy crude oil from the Alberta tar sands region.

Jim Hensley says he was here in Marshall, at his favorite fishing spot, the night the pipeline ruptured on July 25, 2010.

Watch below as he explains what he saw:

https://youtu.be/HTwCIh0psj4

Hensley got back out on the river a couple days after it was reopened to the public in 2012. He says the river is getting better.

“It took a little bit to start hearing the frogs,” Hensley says. “Birds - they’re all back, frogs are back, the turtles are back.”

Time and work

It’s taken a ton of work to get this river where it is now, and it hasn’t been cheap.

Enbridge says it’s paying $1.21 billion in cleanup and settlement costs. That figure includes the state’s settlement filed yesterday afternoon in Calhoun County Circuit Court.

“Now that we have reached a settlement with the state it comes after four plus years of hard work and dedication by Enbridge and all the responding agencies,” says Enbridge spokesperson Jason Manshum.

But the work is not quite done. Most of the oil has been cleaned up, and a lot of restoration work is completed, but there’s still some oil that will be left behind.

State officials say they’re confident the oil left behind is minimal. They say they'll oversee monitoring of these spots to find out whether there are any long-term health concerns associated with leaving this oil behind, and they’re confident the spots where the oil is found is in places people won’t see. 

A trip down the river

We took a canoe trip on the Kalamazoo last week to see how things are looking. 

Mark Ducharme is with the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality.

“We do know there’s oil that’s left in the system, in the banks in some spots, it’s left in the sediment in the bottom of the river,” says Ducharme. “It’s a little bit of oil, it truly is residual, but it’s understanding because we can’t recover that oil, is it going to present a problem long term?”

Residual oil bubbles to the surface in a wetland next to the Kalamazoo River.
Credit Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Residual oil bubbles to the surface in a wetland next to the Kalamazoo River.

Ducharme stopped next to a wetland with a stream running through it. He stirs the sediment with his paddle and a little oil sheen rises up.

“This is one of the areas where there’s probably more oil here than just about any area up and down the river system,” he says.

Ducharme says this is a unique wetland area, and they didn’t want to destroy the wetland to remove the oil, so they decided to leave it.

Under the settlement, Enbridge will have to monitor sites like this, and the state can make them go back in and remove more oil later on.

As we mentioned above, the settlement includes $18 million Enbridge spent to take out Ceresco Dam and restore that part of the Kalamazoo River to a more natural state.

This time lapse video shows that stretch of river as it is now:

https://youtu.be/W_-1y1w_gfc

The settlement also includes money for parks and boating access; money to reimburse the state for its cleanup costs; and $30 million dollars to restore wetlands.

NicoleZachardais an enforcement specialist with theDEQ.

“I think people hear $75 million and think that should be cash to the state. We really were focused on having the investment Enbridge is making go into the river.”

So is this a good deal for the state?

Noah Hall, an expert in environmental and water law with Wayne State University, says the answer to that question depends a lot on how you look at things.

“On one hand, Enbridge is being asked to pay very little in terms of additional penalties above and beyond the damage they caused. On the other hand, because Enbridge’s oil spill contaminated the Kalamazoo River, they’ve already had to pay far more than would be typical after an oil spill to remediate the public resource.”

Hall says state regulators typically aren’t in the business of punishing companies when enforcing their environmental laws. These types of settlements, he says, are much more about cleaning up and improving upon a public resource that was damaged.

“I think the state would phrase this is as giving Enbridge the opportunity to clean up and leave it a little better than they found it,” Hall says. “But this does not seem to be penalizing Enbridge.”

Enbridge is still negotiating settlements with the Environmental Protection Agency, and with federal, state, and tribal representatives for damages it caused to natural resources in the state.

Hall expects the company will get hit with heavy payments in these upcoming settlements.

Copyright 2021 Michigan Radio. To see more, visit Michigan Radio.

People are back enjoying the Kalamazoo River. This spot in Marshall is just down river from where the spill occurred.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
People are back enjoying the Kalamazoo River. This spot in Marshall is just down river from where the spill occurred.
Talmadge Creek right before it flows into the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Talmadge Creek right before it flows into the Kalamazoo River.
The confluence of Talmadge Creek and the Kalamazoo River. This is where oil flowed into the Kalamazoo River in July 2010.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
The confluence of Talmadge Creek and the Kalamazoo River. This is where oil flowed into the Kalamazoo River in July 2010.
A river guide on the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
A river guide on the Kalamazoo River.
Some trees along the banks of the Kalamazoo River bear oil stains left behind from the spill.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
Some trees along the banks of the Kalamazoo River bear oil stains left behind from the spill.
Trillium blooming along the shore of the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
Trillium blooming along the shore of the Kalamazoo River.
Enbridge contractors monitor vegetation along the restored river banks.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
Enbridge contractors monitor vegetation along the restored river banks.
This is one of the areas where the state decided to leave residual oil in place. They say it's a sensitive wetland they'd rather not destroy.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
This is one of the areas where the state decided to leave residual oil in place. They say it's a sensitive wetland they'd rather not destroy.
The oil bubbled up with just a little disturbance to the sediment below.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
The oil bubbled up with just a little disturbance to the sediment below.
"Toe wood" along the banks of the Kalamazoo River used to stabilize the banks.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
"Toe wood" along the banks of the Kalamazoo River used to stabilize the banks.
Stakes holding a mat in place to keep the banks from eroding. Willow trees have also been planted and are in their first growing season.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
Stakes holding a mat in place to keep the banks from eroding. Willow trees have also been planted and are in their first growing season.
As part of the settlement, Enbridge made improvements to river access along the Kalamazoo. This dock is designed to give people with disabilities access to the river.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
As part of the settlement, Enbridge made improvements to river access along the Kalamazoo. This dock is designed to give people with disabilities access to the river.
Fishing along the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
Fishing along the Kalamazoo River.
Jay Wesley of the MDNR Fisheries Division points out signs of beaver along the river. Wesley says their fish studies show a healthy population in the river now.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Jay Wesley of the MDNR Fisheries Division points out signs of beaver along the river. Wesley says their fish studies show a healthy population in the river now.
Tree felled by a beaver along the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
Tree felled by a beaver along the Kalamazoo River.
The site of the former Ceresco Dam. Enbridge removed the dam as part of the settlement with Michigan.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
The site of the former Ceresco Dam. Enbridge removed the dam as part of the settlement with Michigan.
The walls of the old Ceresco Dam.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
The walls of the old Ceresco Dam.
A monitoring well along the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
A monitoring well along the Kalamazoo River.
One of the first houses along the Kalamazoo River downstream from Talmadge Creek.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
One of the first houses along the Kalamazoo River downstream from Talmadge Creek.
This was one of the first residential areas affected by the 2010 oil spill. Drinking water wells have been monitored here and the state says no chemicals from the spill have turned up.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
This was one of the first residential areas affected by the 2010 oil spill. Drinking water wells have been monitored here and the state says no chemicals from the spill have turned up.
One of the residential areas affected by the spill. Enbridge purchased many homes affected by the spill.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
One of the residential areas affected by the spill. Enbridge purchased many homes affected by the spill.
A reconstructed riffle along the Kalamazoo River. This area used to be underwater because of the backwater from the old Ceresco Dam.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
A reconstructed riffle along the Kalamazoo River. This area used to be underwater because of the backwater from the old Ceresco Dam.
A creek flows through a bank stabilized with toe wood along the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
A creek flows through a bank stabilized with toe wood along the Kalamazoo River.
Enbridge contractors monitoring vegetation along the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Enbridge contractors monitoring vegetation along the Kalamazoo River.
A painted turtle warms itself on a rock in the Kalamazoo River.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
A painted turtle warms itself on a rock in the Kalamazoo River.
A stake marks the edge of Talmadge Creek's channel.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
A stake marks the edge of Talmadge Creek's channel.
Enbridge removed oil and reconstructed the river bank along Talmadge Creek.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Enbridge removed oil and reconstructed the river bank along Talmadge Creek.
Enbridge removed oil and reconstructed the river bank along Talmadge Creek.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Enbridge removed oil and reconstructed the river bank along Talmadge Creek.
On the bank of Talmadge Creek.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
On the bank of Talmadge Creek.
Ground zero for the 2010 oil spill was in Marshall, Michigan.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
Ground zero for the 2010 oil spill was in Marshall, Michigan.
Talmadge Creek today.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
Talmadge Creek today.
The Kalamazoo River at Saylor's Landing in Marshall, Michigan.
Mark Brush / Michigan Radio
/
Michigan Radio
The Kalamazoo River at Saylor's Landing in Marshall, Michigan.

Mark is a senior reporter/producer at Michigan Radio where he's been working to develop the station's online news content since 2010.
Rebecca Williams