Nebraska to decide fate of controversial Keystone XL
pipeline
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[November 20, 2017]
By Kevin O'Hanlon and Valerie Volcovici
LINCOLN, Nebraska/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
Nebraska regulators will announce their decision on Monday on whether to
approve TransCanada Corp’s Keystone XL pipeline route through the state,
the last big hurdle for the long-delayed project.
Just days ago, TransCanada's existing Keystone system spilled 5,000
barrels in South Dakota and pipeline opponents said the spill
highlighted the risks posed by the proposed XL expansion.
The stakes are big. President Donald Trump, a Republican, has made
Keystone XL’s success a plank in his effort to boost the U.S. energy
industry. Environmentalists have made the project a symbol of their
broader fight against fossil fuels and global warming.
The proposed 1,179-mile (1,897-km) pipeline linking Canada’s oil sands
to U.S. refineries has been a lightning rod of controversy since it was
proposed nearly a decade ago. The administration of former President
Barack Obama, a Democrat, considered the line for years before rejecting
it in 2015 on environmental grounds.
Trump swiftly reversed that decision, handing TransCanada a federal
permit for the pipeline in March and arguing the project will lower fuel
prices, boost national security, and bring jobs.
The decision placed the pipeline's fate into the hands of an obscure
regulatory body in Nebraska, the only state that had yet to approve the
pipeline’s route. Nebraska's Public Service Commission is charged with
assessing whether the route is in the state's best interests, but cannot
consider the risk of spills since the project already has an
environmental permit.
UNCERTAIN MARKET
Opposition to the line in Nebraska has been driven mainly by a group of
around 90 landowners whose farms lie along the proposed route. They have
said they are worried spills could pollute water critical for grazing
cattle, and that tax revenue will be short-lived and jobs will be
temporary.
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An aerial view shows the darkened ground of an oil spill which shut
down the Keystone pipeline between Canada and the United States,
located in an agricultural area near Amherst, South Dakota, U.S., in
this photo provided November 18, 2017. Courtesy DroneBase/Handout
via REUTERS
"The spill (in South Dakota) only confirms all our fears," said Jeanne Crummly,
a rancher in Page, Nebraska.
TransCanada and its supporters have responded by saying the project would bring
economic benefits, and could be operated safely. The company said last week's
spill near Amherst, South Dakota, was contained and being cleaned up.
Nationwide, Trump has said Keystone XL would create 28,000 jobs. But a 2014
State Department study predicted just 3,900 construction jobs and 35 permanent
jobs.
The project could be a boon for Canada, which has struggled to bring its vast
oil reserves to market. But there are questions about demand for the pipeline
after a surge in drilling activity in the United States.
"Considering the growth of oil output in the U.S. ... the economics of importing
the heavy crude from Canada is not fully justified," said Chirag Rathi, director
at business consultancy Frost & Sullivan in Texas.
TransCanada has said it has received adequate support to make the pipeline
viable. But it has yet to announce results of its open season to gauge interest
among shippers, which closed at the end of October.
(Additional reporting by Nia Williams and Ethan Lou in Calgary; Writing by
Richard Valdmanis; editing by Grant McCool)
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