Michigan Oil Spill May Top 1 Million Gallons, EPA Says

As clean-up efforts continue in the Gulf, officials are scrambling to stop a Michigan oil spill that is believed to be one of the largest ever in the Midwest. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that more than one million gallons of oil may have spilled into the Kalamazoo River, and Governor Jennifer M. Granholm has expressed fears that the oil could reach Lake Michigan.

She has also criticized containment efforts, and called the resources the EPA and the pipeline company have devoted to fight the spill “wholly inadequate.”

“The last thing any of us want to see is a smaller version of what has happened in the Gulf,” Granholm said Wednesday. “From my perspective the response has been anemic.”

On Wednesday, the EPA said that it had asked the Coast Guard to provide $2 million for containment.  Enbridge Energy Partners, owner of the failed pipeline, said it was doubling the length of boom on the river to 28,000 feet, and doubling the number of cleanup workers to 300.

“Our intent is to return your community to its original state and the waterways to their normal state,” Enbridge’s CEO Patrick Daniel said at a press conference Monday. “We do commit to doing that.”

The company has also paid for hotel rooms for at least 30 families who complained about about air quality and other issues, The New York Times reports.

So far, the oil has contaminated at least 35 miles of the river.

The leak in the 30-inch pipeline started early Monday near a Marshall, Mich., pump station, and the pipeline and pumps were shut down when it was discovered. EPA officials are investigating the cause of the leak.

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