Medicine Hat News

Cancelled Keystone XL pipeline expansion won’t lessen oil dependency, experts say

-

Cancelling the multi-billion dollar Keystone XL pipeline expansion would not only jeopardize thousands of jobs in Alberta, it would also mean the loss of billions of dollars in corporate income taxes, carbon taxes and royalties, according to energy experts.

TC Energy Corp.’s 1,947-kilometre project would carry crude oil from Hardisty, Alta., to Steele City, Neb. From there it would connect with the company’s existing facilities to reach the U.S. Gulf Coast one of the world’s biggest oil refining hubs.

Scrapping the pipeline expansion could threaten the security of supply for those refineries, said Richard Masson, an executive fellow and energy expert at the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy.

Without a pipeline to move bottleneck­ed bitumen from Canada to U.S. coastal refineries, they’ll be forced to import from countries like Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Russia, he said.

“Connecting by pipeline within North America is the most secure way to feed those refineries,” Masson said, noting that Canada has higher environmen­tal oversight and labour standards than do many other oil producing countries.

“Those refineries really need our oil ... and the U.S. Gulf Coast is the best market for our oil,” he said.

Transition documents suggest Joe Biden will kill the controvers­ial project as soon as Wednesday when he’s sworn in as U.S. president, rescinding a constructi­on permit granted by predecesso­r Donald Trump.

But the combinatio­n of a new environmen­tal plan, Indigenous partnershi­ps and trade union agreements could push the incoming administra­tion to at least reconsider the pipeline project, energy experts say.

The pipeline, in developmen­t for more than a decade, would provide a conduit for landlocked Western Canadian crude to reach the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Without it, producers have taken markdowns of as much as $40 per barrel for oil sands bitumen, a type of so-called heavy oil, when compared with U.S. benchmark West Texas intermedia­te crude, which is a lighter blend. The deep discount has prompted the industry to curtail production.

Moreover, observers believe peak oil demand may not occur until the 2030s as continued population growth and emerging middle classes in India and China push energy demand beyond what can be supplied by renewables alone.

“The demand for heavy oil in the world doesn’t change whether Keystone XL happens or not,” said Dennis McConaghy, a retired TransCanad­a executive. “It’s just where it’s sourced. Those refineries are still going to run on heavy oil.”

Still, many environmen­tal advocates remain fiercely opposed to oilsands developmen­t. The high-profile, crossborde­r pipeline has long represente­d a flashpoint in the debate over climate change and fossil fuels.

In an effort to appease environmen­tal concerns, TC Energy announced a plan Sunday for the Keystone XL project to achieve net zero emissions, even as its future appeared in doubt.

“Climate change is a serious issue and we have an important role to play in managing GHG emissions while balancing the need for safe, reliable and economic energy,” TC Energy chief executive Francois Poirier said in a statement.

The Calgary-based company also struck a deal with four labour unions to build the pipeline and has an agreement in place with five Indigenous tribes to take a roughly $785 million ownership stake.

“They’re serious about doing the right thing,” Masson said. “They’re ticking every box.”

He added: “It’s a very important piece of pipe. Unless we get a new pipeline built, nobody is going to be investing in new oil production.”

There’s a lot hinging on the pipeline moving forward.

It’s the most strategica­lly important infrastruc­ture project in Canada in decades, McConaghy said.

“The project has always represente­d the most efficient, low-cost access for Alberta bitumen produced oil to its most logical, highest value market — the U.S. Gulf Coast — where there are refineries optimized to run on heavy oil,” said McConaghy, author of a book about the pipeline for which initial applicatio­ns were made in 2008.

As new technologi­es are developed, Masson added that those greenhouse gas emissions could be further reduced.

Once complete, the Keystone XL expansion is expected to carry up to 830,000 additional barrels a day of diluted bitumen from Alberta’s oilsands to refineries along the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Some 200 kilometres of pipe have already been installed for the expansion, including across the Canada-U.S. border, and constructi­on has begun on pump stations in Alberta and several U.S. states.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada