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  • Updated
    4
    Mar
    2013
    2:48pm, EST

    State Department admits Keystone environmental impact but says there's no better way

    TransCanada Corp. via Reuters file

    The Keystone XL oil pipeline, pictured under construction Jan. 18, 2012, in North Dakota.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    This story has been updated to reflect a correction.

    Construction of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline would create "numerous" and "substantial" impacts on the environment, the State Department said Friday in a draft environmental impact statement. But the project is a better bet than any of the alternatives, it said in essentially clearing the project to go ahead.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The report concluded that the Canadian synthetic crude oil the pipeline is slated to transport into the U.S. produces 17 percent more greenhouse gases than natural crude oil already refined here. In addition, it said the construction phase of the project would result in carbon dioxide emissions equiavalent to about 626,000 passenger vehicles operating for a full year.


    Without directly saying so, the report signaled the State Department's belief that the pipeline should go ahead, concluding that other modes of transportation would have the same impacts and that proposed alternatives — including an above-ground route and a smaller-diameter pipe — "were not reasonable."

    And on a central issue of discussion, it concluded that blocking the pipeline wouldn't make any difference in the U.S.'s high consumption of oil.

    Reaction from environmental groups was swift.

    "The Sierra Club is outraged by the State Department's deeply flawed analysis today on Keystone XL," the Sierra Club tweeted.

    Gene Karpinski, president of the League of Conservation Voters, said the report failed to appreciate the pipeline's potential effect on climate change.

    "People who think our climate wouldn't be negatively impacted by Keystone XL have their heads in the (tar) sands," he said in a statement. "... LCV will work to ensure that the millions of Americans opposed to this dangerous pipeline have their voices heard during the comment period and that Keystone XL is rejected once and for all."

    But House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, welcomed the report, which he said "makes clear there is no reason for this critical pipeline to be blocked one more day."

    "After four years of needless delays, it is time for President Obama to stand up for middle-class jobs and energy security and approve the Keystone pipeline," Boehner said.

    The environmental statement is only a draft, not a final decision whether to greenlight the project. A public comment period of 45 days is next.

    A final decision on the $5.3 billion pipeline, a project of TransCanada Corp., has been pending for more than four years as environmental activists battle to kill it, contending that it contributes to the U.S.'s dependence on "dirty fuel" that generates higher emissions than crude oil refined in the U.S.

    The pipeline would transport synthetic crude oil from oil sands in northeastern Alberta to refineries running along the spine of the U.S. all the way down to Texas. Along the way, the 2,000-page report said, it could also:

    • Disturb highly erodible soil along nearly half of the 875-mile U.S. segment — including 4,715 acres of "prime farmland soil."
    • Degrade streams and other surface water.
    • Encroach on the habitats of 13 federally protected species or species being considered for that designation, including the whooping crane and the greater sage grouse.
    • Be susceptible to potentially disastrous leaks and spill.

    On the other side of the balance, the report noted the potential for economic development and growth in impoverished communities along the pipeline's pathway, saying it could create about 42,000 jobs during the construction period, about 3,900 of them directly employed in construction activities. The report noted that after construction is completed, the project would generate 35 permanent and 15 temporary jobs, primarily for routine inspections, maintenance and repairs.

    President Barack Obama will have the final say on the project, which is being reviewed by the State Department, not the Environmental Protection Agency, because the pipeline would cross national borders. Obama signaled his support for the southern section of the line last year, but he gave environmentalists a measure of hope in January, when he promised to do more to fight climate change in his inaugural address. 

    Tens of thousands of protesters jammed the National Mall in Washington on Feb. 17 to urge Obama to reject pipeline. They adopted the slogan "Forward" — cribbing Obama's own campaign slogan.

    The final decision will be a crucial one for Canada, which may need to look elsewhere for new energy markets if the pipeline is rejected.

    Tom Capra, Catherine Chomiak and Frank Thorp of NBC News contributed to this report. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    This story reflects the following correction: This story misstated the State Department's projection of the number of construction jobs the Keystone XL pipeline project would create. The department's draft environmental impact statement said the project could create about 42,000 jobs during the construction period, about 3,900 of them directly employed in construction activities. The report noted that after construction is completed, the project would generate 35 permanent and 15 temporary jobs, primarily for routine inspections, maintenance and repairs.

    This story was originally published on Fri Mar 1, 2013 5:50 PM EST

    822 comments

    Look at the locations that it runs through: The Great Plains, our breadbasket. Water flows for miles underground throughout the region.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, climate-change, barack-obama, updated, transcanada, keystone-pipeline
  • 4
    May
    2012
    12:13pm, EDT

    Reworked Keystone pipeline application back for US review

    MSNBC host Lawrence O'Donnell and guests discuss green initiatives in light of the new Keystone route proposal.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    The energy hot potato known as the Keystone XL pipeline was back to the State Department, which announced Friday that it had received a new application from developer TransCanada that includes a reworked route through Nebraska. 


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Environmental groups and industry quickly lined up on opposite sides, while the Obama administration said a final decision is not likely before next year.

    In Nebraska, Republicans had joined Democrats in objecting to an initial proposal of routing the $7 billion natural gas pipeline from Canada through the sensitive Sandhills region and over the Ogallala Aquifer. 


    TransCanada last month released a new proposal that shows the proposed route now east of the Sandhills, but environmentalists question how the map was drawn as well as the overall pipeline, which would start in Canada's "tar sands" region, where extracting the gas includes heavy mining. 

    "TransCanada is still pushing the same dirty tar sands pipeline over the Sandhills, over the Ogallala Aquifer, and endangering Americans' drinking water,” Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune said in a statement. "They think that if they redraw the map they can fool the people whose land and livelihoods would be threatened by this dangerous pipeline."

    A senior executive at the American Petroleum Industry told msnbc.com that he expected Nebraska to approve the new route as part of its ongoing state process. 

    CNBC's Brian Sullivan speaks to Alex Pourbaix, TransCanada, regarding its revised proposal to build its Keystone XL pipeline project.

    "We expect to see strong support" in Nebraska, API Vice President Marty Durbin said. "From our standpoint there are no more excuses."

    The State Department, which is involved because the pipeline would cross a U.S. border, said in a statement that it would hire a third-party consultant to review the application, and noted that Nebraska itself doesn't expect to finalize its own decision on the new route for six to nine months.

    The controversy has also become a campaign issue between President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney.

    Obama has emphasized that he's for increased energy production, and even traveled to an existing stretch of the Keystone pipeline in Oklahoma to show his support.

    But the administration also blocked the northern section of the pipeline earlier this year due to the issues in Nebraska.

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    134 comments

    Why do I tend to think that this will magically be approved just before the election?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, environment, keystone, transcanada
  • 19
    Apr
    2012
    12:54pm, EDT

    Alternate route for controversial stretch of Keystone pipeline unveiled

    Rep. James Lankford, R-Okla., and Salon.com's Joan Walsh weigh in on the Keystone controversy.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    The company behind the controversial pipeline that's become an environmental lightning rod -- not to mention a presidential campaign issue -- has unveiled its preferred alternative for a stretch that got bogged down in Nebraska and triggered an Obama administration review.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Unveiled on Thursday, the map of TransCanada's preferred alternative steers the new Keystone pipeline route well east of the sensitive Nebraska Sandhills region. Both Democrats and Republicans in the state had raised concerns about potential impacts by the pipeline to farms as well as water supplies in that area.

    The U.S. State Department, which has federal jurisdiction because the pipeline comes from abroad, i.e. Canada, has held off approving the project because of those concerns.


    Nebraska said it plans to hold public hearings and receive comments on the new proposal, which is now likely to get strong support in the state.

    Click here for TransCanada's new proposal

    TransCanada

    TransCanada's preferred alternative is seen in green to the right of the brown area, which represents the Sandhills region. Its initial route, seen in blue, ran through the region.

    At the national level, Republicans have accused President Barack Obama of trying to undermine the pipeline.

    Last month Obama traveled to an existing stretch of the pipeline in Cushing, Okla., to show support for extending it farther south to Texas, where refineries would turn crude into oil and other petroleum products.

    "I am directing my administration to cut through red tape, break through bureaucratic hurdles, and make this project a priority," he said on March 22.

    He also indicated he wasn't opposed to the Nebraska section as long as it passed an environmental review.

    "To be extra careful that the construction of the pipeline in an area like that wouldn't put the health and safety of the American people at risk, our experts said that we needed a certain amount of time to review the project," he said.

    The Keystone Pipeline is dominating the headlines recently, as some analysts say we're at the start of a new energy pipeline boom, reports CNBC's Bertha Coombs.

    Environmentalists still oppose the overall project because it would carry a type of crude oil known as tar sands that they say is more damaging that traditional oil wells.

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    85 comments

    See, Nebraskan Republicans and Democrats had a problem with the pipeline, not just environmentalists and Democrats, like the Republicans in D.C. want us to believe. Manipulative politicians...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, environment, obama, keystone, transcanada

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