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Canada’s approval of Kinder Morgan’s TransMountain pipeline is raising concerns with Washington state officials, who say they have not received adequate assurances that U.S. waters will be protected in the event of an oil tanker spill.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee’s office says he doesn’t have enough details of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s pledged $1.5-billion Oceans Protection Plan to know if enough spill prevention measures will be in place, or that the state would be protected in the event of a spill.

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“The governor has been very clear that safe transport of crude oil across the Salish Sea requires robust oil spill planning and response including the necessary equipment to locate, contain and recover sinking/submerged oil,”said Tara Lee, a communications officer for Inslee. “We do not have enough detail yet that this plan will address our concerns.”

The planned pipeline also faces opposition from Seattle politicians who, like their counterparts in Vancouver, are opposed to any expansion of the oil industry, and who openly support the protesters at Standing Rock who are against the Dakota Access Pipeline. It has also generated promises of court fights from First Nations on both sides of the border.