Clinton
breaks silence on Keystone pipeline, opposes it
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[September 23, 2015]
By Amanda Becker
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - Democratic
U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who has long avoided a firm
position on the Keystone XL oil pipeline, broke her silence on Tuesday
and said she opposed it.
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"I have a responsibility to you and other voters," Clinton, a
former secretary of state, said at a town hall event in Iowa about
TransCanada Corp's <TRP.TO> project to bring Canadian oil to
refineries on the Gulf of Mexico via Nebraska.
A decision on Keystone that has been pending for seven years is
important as it has become "a distraction from the important work we
have to do to combat climate change," she said.
"Therefore, I oppose it," she said.
Environmental activists close to Clinton's campaign said the timing
of her remarks was driven by her desire to make clear her opposition
before the Oct. 13 Democratic debate.
Senator Bernie Sanders, a rival for the Democratic presidential
nomination, opposes the pipeline and had urged her to take a
position.
Sanders said in a statement he was glad Clinton "finally has made a
decision and I welcome her opposition to the pipeline." It would be
"absurd to encourage the extraction and transportation of some of
the dirtiest fossil fuel on the planet," he said.
Clinton told the Des Moines Register editorial board she would
release a plan in the next few days for a clean energy agreement
among the United States, Canada and Mexico. She said the plan would
create jobs.
UNIONS VS. ENVIRONMENTALISTS
Clinton has walked a fine line on supporting or opposing the
pipeline, which puts two key Democratic constituencies at odds:
organized labor and environmentalists.
Many labor unions have pushed for approval of the pipeline, saying
it would create thousands of construction jobs. Environmental
activists have opposed it as delaying the transition to cleaner
forms of energy and increasing emissions of greenhouse gases by
speeding development of Canada's oil sands.
The State Department has said the pipeline would directly create
3,900 construction jobs for the year or two it was being built, and
would create 35 full-time jobs once completed, along with 15
temporary contractor positions.
Jeb Bush, a Republican presidential candidate, tweeted that
Clinton's stance on Keystone means she "favors environmental
extremists over U.S. jobs."
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Keystone watchers have been eager to learn Clinton's opinion about
the pipeline since 2010. Then, as secretary of state, she said she
was inclined to approve it. Asked repeatedly about the project since
she entered the race in April, she has declined to state her stance.
Accused by some of being evasive out of political expediency,
Clinton has said she refrained from taking a stand because did not
want to "second-guess" her former boss, President Barack Obama.
Obama is expected to decide on Keystone in coming months. The White
House declined to comment on Clinton's position.
The State Department, which will make a recommendation to Obama when
it is finished with a review of the project, said there is no
timeline for the completion of that review.
Canada's conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper is a strong
proponent of the pipeline approval of which could breathe life into
Alberta's oil fields. Harper said through a spokesman that Canada
knows "the American people support the project."
TransCanada spokesman Davis Sheremata said the company remains
focused on securing a permit for the project.
(Reporting by Amanda Becker in Des Moines and Timothy Gardner, Alana
Wise, Jeff Mason and Valerie Volcovici in Washington, Jonathan Allen
in New York and Nia Williams in Calgary; Writing by Timothy Gardner;
Editing by Tim Ahmann and David Gregorio)
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