Last fall, Enbridge offered the Red Lake Band of Chippewa a lucrative deal if the tribe would drop legal efforts to quash the company's new pipeline across northern Minnesota. Red Lake said no.
In 2018, Enbridge made an attractive offer to the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa to run part of the pipeline — a replacement for its current aging and corroding Line 3 — through its reservation.
Faced with the alternative of having the new Line 3 next door with no control over it, the tribe took the deal. But it has caused lingering bad feelings with other Ojibwe.
The two offers underscore Enbridge's attempts to win over the Ojibwe bands in Minnesota — and the tensions those efforts have caused as construction of the controversial pipeline enters its fourth month.
"There has been an attempt [by Enbridge] to divide us, and to an extent it has," said Sam Strong, Red Lake's tribal secretary. "It's very negative, and it is their playbook."
Paul Eberth, Enbridge's U.S. tribal engagement director, rejected that idea.
"Our aim is to engage with the tribes to understand what their needs are and to seek solutions for both parties," he said. "Those solutions are different for different tribes."
Enbridge is spending more than $3 billion on the new Line 3, one of the largest construction projects for Minnesota in recent years. Line 3 is one of six Enbridge pipelines along a similar corridor, carrying thick crude from Alberta, Canada, to Superior, Wis. The corridor crosses the Leech Lake and Fond du Lac reservations.