Author Topic: Canada begging Obama to approve oil pipeline (So far Obama has been silent)  (Read 11225 times)

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Pressure builds on Obama with looming Keystone deadline
Fuel Fix ^ | January 11, 2012 | Puneet Kollipara





A looming deadline for a decision on the Keystone XL pipeline is ratcheting up political pressure on President Barack Obama, who will anger key supporters regardless of his decision.

Calgary-based TransCanada Corp.’s proposed 1,700-mile pipeline would carry tar-sands crude from Alberta to Texas refineries in Port Arthur and Houston.

It appeared late last year that the administration had found a way to delay the permitting decision past this year’s election. But the pipeline’s Republican supporters raised the stakes by negotiating inclusion of a 60-day decision deadline as part of the two-month payroll tax cut extension enacted Dec. 23.

The Feb. 21 deadline forces Obama to choose between the wishes of two key constituencies – environmentalists and some Democratic fundraisers who oppose the pipeline, and some labor unions that support it as a job-maker.

The decision on a permit technically rests with the State Department because the pipeline would cross the U.S.-Canada border, although Obama said last year that he might make the final decision himself. A decision had been expected by the end of 2011.

In November, the State Department said it would delay the pipeline decision until after the 2012 election, citing the need to study alternative routes that avoid a drinking- water aquifer in Nebraska.

Republican move

Republicans trumped that move by tying the Keystone deadline to the payroll tax cut extension and including a provision allowing Nebraska and TransCanada time to find an alternative route in the state if Keystone XL is approved.

TransCanada spokesman Terry Cunha said that if the pipeline is approved, the company could start building other portions of it during the selection and evaluation of its route through Nebraska.

But Anthony Swift, staff lawyer with the Natural Resources Defense Council, which opposes Keystone XL, said it would be illegal for the U.S. to approve the pipeline without knowing and studying the final Nebraska route.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said last week that the department “will make an appropriate decision consistent with relevant law.”

TransCanada options

Cunha declined to say what TransCanada will do if the administration rejects the pipeline.

It could reapply, making changes to address the basis of the rejection, but the revised application would have to go through the same lengthy review process, said William Bumpers, a lawyer with Washington-based Baker Botts who has represented energy companies.

Republicans say construction of the pipeline would create 20,000 jobs and make America more energy secure.

The American Petroleum Institute, an oil-industry group leading an election-year campaign to push Americans to vote on the basis of energy issues, warned of major consequences for Obama if Keystone XL is rejected.

Pipeline opponents are running their own campaigns, contending the project would create at most 6,000 temporary jobs, promote an especially dirty form of oil and possibly pollute groundwater.

Swift, of the Natural Resources Defense Council, said pipeline opponents are spotlighting information that they believe is not getting enough attention – rejecting, for example, proponents’ contention that the pipeline would reduce reliance on foreign oil.

Effect on imports?

They point to a government study that found Keystone wouldn’t affect U.S. oil imports from Canada through 2030.

Swift also said Gulf refiners, such as San Antonio-based Valero, could export their refined products and enjoy tax benefits.

Valero spokesman Bill Day said, however, that crude from Keystone XL would be mixed with oil from other sources at Valero’s Port Arthur refinery, and that most of that refinery’s production goes to domestic uses.

“It’s unfortunate that it’s become a political issue rather than an economic issue,” Day said.



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Exclusive: Republicans move to control Keystone approval
 

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/11/us-usa-keystone-bill-idUSTRE80A28C20120111?feedType=RSS&feedName=politicsNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Reuters%2FPoliticsNews+%28News+%2F+US+%2F+Politics+News%29




WASHINGTON | Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:54pm EST



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Congressional Republicans, who are urging President Barack Obama to back the Canada-to-Texas Keystone XL oil pipeline, are now working on plans to take the reins of approval from the hands of the president should the White House say no.

North Dakota Senator John Hoeven, whose state is counting on the pipeline to help move its newfound bounty of shale oil, is drafting legislation that would see Congress give the green light to the project by using its constitutional powers to regulate commerce with foreign nations, an aide told Reuters.

After delaying the project past the November 2012 election, Obama was compelled by Congress to decide by February 21 on whether to approve the pipeline that would sharply boost the flow of oil from Canada's oil sands.

Should Obama reject the project, Senate Republicans would look at a bill that would force the go-ahead so work could begin on the $7 billion pipeline, save for a portion going through Nebraska, where the state government continues work on an alternate route, said Ryan Bernstein, an energy adviser to Hoeven.

He said Hoeven is working on the new approach with other key Republican senators, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Richard Lugar, David Vitter, Lisa Murkowski and Mike Johanns.

TransCanada Corp's oil sands pipeline has put Obama in a political bind at the start of what is expected to be a difficult re-election campaign, and has become a useful tool for Republicans seeking to portray Obama as dithering on a project that they say would create 20,000 jobs.

PIPELINE BECOMES ELECTION ISSUE

Environmental groups, an important part of Obama's political

base, have made defeating the line a top priority. They are concerned about the carbon emissions that come from processing the oil sands, and they argue the project will create fewer than 5,000 jobs.

The White House in November delayed its decision on Keystone to find a new route around environmentally sensitive lands in the Nebraska portion of its route. This effectively punted the decision beyond the November U.S. presidential election.

Republicans struck back by inserting language in the December payroll tax cut bill that gave Obama 60 days to grant a permit for the project or explain why it was not in the national interest.

Republicans hope that rising gasoline prices will increase pressure on the White House as the United States pushes for more sanctions on Iran to discourage countries from buying its oil.

Lugar, top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said it does not make sense to slow an oil pipeline from a reliable supplier such as Canada.

"Even if in the future we do not ourselves consume all the Canadian oil imported, having that crude in the U.S. system would give us tremendous flexibility to deal with supply shortages caused by conflict, political manipulation, terrorism, or natural disaster," Lugar said in a January 6 letter to Obama.

'ANY AND ALL LEGISLATIVE OPTIONS' IN PLAY

A spokesman for House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner declined to comment on whether House Republicans would seek to include a new Keystone provision in legislation that will be needed to extend the payroll tax cut that expires on February 29.

The White House and State Department have laid some ground for saying no, said Lee Terry, a Republican representative from Nebraska who is a prominent advocate for Keystone on the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

In December, the administration said imposing the 60-day deadline could violate environmental laws, effectively ruling out a permit.

A majority of voters support the pipeline, Rasmussen poll results from late December show, and most labor unions support it too. Saying "no" to the pipeline could turn it into an election issue, Terry said in an interview.

Obama could try to appease both sides by declaring the project is in the national interest, but making a permit contingent on further study of routes through Nebraska.

But Terry said he believes Republicans will consider "any and all legislative options" if the pipeline is delayed further, including but not limited to making it part of the next payroll tax package.

"Right now, I think everything is on the table," he said.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)








Thugbama is pandering to his eco-nazi base.   

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Keystone XL Pipeline And Jobs — Put Up Or Shut Up, Obama
Investor's Business Daily ^ | January 15, 2012 | IBD staff
Posted on January 15, 2012 2:09:19 PM EST by raptor22

Politics: The day after the president announces he would reward businesses that bring jobs into the U.S., the Chamber of Commerce asks: What about the pipeline from Canada that would bring both jobs and energy?

The irony was mind-boggling when President Obama addressed a group of business leaders at the White House last Wednesday on his plans to reward "insourcing."

"There are workers ready to work right now," he told them. "In the next few weeks, I will put forward new tax proposals that reward companies that choose to bring jobs home and invest in America — and eliminate tax breaks for companies that move jobs overseas. Because there is opportunity to be had right here."

Indeed, there are opportunities right now for companies to bring jobs to the U.S. and workers ready to fill them, as U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue reminded Obama the next day during his "State of American Business 2012" address.

"We can put 20,000 Americans to work right away and up to 250,000 over the life of the project," Donohue said. "Labor unions and the business community alike are urging President Obama to act in the best interests of our national security and our workers, and approve the pipeline."

It would be in the president's best political interests as well, helping lower energy prices and creating jobs in an economy struggling to do so. Even a number of unions, a major part of the Democratic base, are backing the project.

They include the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, the International Union of Operating Engineers, the Teamsters, the Laborers' International Union, the Building & Construction Trades Department of the AFL-CIO and the United Association of Plumbers & Pipe Fitters for the United States & Canada. They want the jobs Keystone XL would bring.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.investors.com ...

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http://www.businessinsider.com/obama-to-deny-keystone-pipeline-2012-1


obama is to jobs like Sandusky is to baby sitting. 

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http://www.businessinsider.com/obama-to-deny-keystone-pipeline-2012-1


obama is to jobs like Sandusky is to baby sitting. 
:-[ :-[

He truely is the worst thing to happen to this country in recent history.
He proves it with every fucking decision he makes.

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:-[ :-[

He truely is the worst thing to happen to this country in recent history.
He proves it with every fucking decision he makes.

As are those who voted for him.   I blame them, not him as much.   

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Canadian Leader Says He's Profoundly Disappointed Obama Turned Down the Keystone XL Pipeline
TORONTO January 18, 2012 (AP)



Canadian leader says he's profoundly disappointed Obama turned down the Keystone XL pipeline.


http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/canadian-leader-profoundly-disappointed-obama-turned-keystone-xl-15388481




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Canada Disappointed Over Pipeline Rejection
By ROB GILLIES Associated Press
TORONTO January 18, 2012 (AP)


http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/canada-disappointed-pipeline-rejection-15388586





Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper says he told Barack Obama he was profoundly disappointed after the U.S. president called to tell him the administration rejected a plan to build an oil pipeline from Canada to Texas.

Andrew MacDougall, a spokesman for Harper, said Wednesday that Obama explained the decision was not on the merits of the Keystone XL pipeline, but rather on the "arbitrary nature" of the Feb. 21 deadline set by a Republicans as part of tax measure he signed.

Obama said the decision was without prejudice, meaning that TransCanada is free to reapply.

MacDougall says Harper told Obama that he hoped the pipeline would ultimately be approved given the jobs it would create both in Canada and the U.S.