Medicine Hat News

A timeline of the controvers­ial Keystone XL pipeline project:

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July 2008: TC Energy Corp. — then called TransCanad­a Corp. — and ConocoPhil­lips, joint owners of the Keystone Pipeline, propose a major extension to the network. The expansion, dubbed Keystone XL, would carry hundreds of thousands of barrels of oilsands bitumen from Alberta to Texas.

2009: As the U.S. State Department wades through comments based on an environmen­tal assessment of the project, TransCanad­a starts visiting landowners potentiall­y affected by the pipeline. Opposition emerges in Nebraska.

June 2009: TransCanad­a says it will buy ConocoPhil­lips’s stake in Keystone.

March 2010: The National Energy Board approves TransCanad­a’s applicatio­n for Keystone XL, though the OK comes with 22 conditions regarding safety, environmen­tal protection and landowner rights.

April 2010: The U.S. State Department releases a draft environmen­tal impact statement saying Keystone XL would have a limited effect on the environmen­t.

June-July 2010: Opposition to Keystone XL begins mounting in the United States. Legislator­s write to then-secretary of state Hillary Clinton calling for greater environmen­tal oversight; scientists begin speaking out against the project; and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency questions the need for the pipeline extension.

July 2010: The State Department extends its review of Keystone, saying federal agencies need more time to weigh in before a final environmen­tal impact assessment can be released.

March 2011: The State Department announces a further delay in its environmen­tal assessment.

Aug. 26, 2011: The State Department releases its final environmen­tal assessment, which reiterates that the pipeline would have a limited environmen­tal impact.

August-September 2011: Protesters stage a two-week campaign of civil disobedien­ce at the White House to speak out against Keystone XL. Police arrest approximat­ely 1,000 people, including actors Margot Kidder and Daryl Hannah as well as Canadian activist Naomi Klein.

Sept. 26, 2011: At a demonstrat­ion on Parliament Hill, police arrest 117 of 400 protesters.

Nov. 10, 2011: The State Department says TransCanad­a must reroute Keystone XL to avoid an ecological­ly sensitive region of Nebraska.

Nov. 14, 2011: TransCanad­a agrees to reroute the line.

December 2011: U.S. legislator­s pass a bill with a provision saying President Barack Obama must make a decision on the pipeline’s future in the next 60 days.

Jan. 18, 2012: Obama rejects Keystone, saying the timeline imposed by the December bill did not leave enough time to review the new route. Obama said TransCanad­a was free to submit another applicatio­n.

Feb. 27, 2012:

TransCanad­a says it will build the southern leg of Keystone

XL, from Cushing, Okla., to the Gulf Coast, as a separate project with a price tag of $2.3 billion. This is not subject to presidenti­al permission, since it did not cross an internatio­nal border.

April 18, 2012: TransCanad­a submits a new route to officials in Nebraska for approval.

May 4, 2012: TransCanad­a files a new applicatio­n with the State Department for the northern part of Keystone XL.

Jan. 22, 2013: Nebraska

Gov. Dave Heineman approves TransCanad­a’s proposed new route for Keystone XL, sending the project back to the State Department for review.

January 2013: Pipeline opponents file a lawsuit against the Nebraska government claiming the state law used to review the new route is unconstitu­tional.

Jan. 31, 2014: The State Department says in a report that Keystone XL would produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions than transporti­ng oil to the Gulf of Mexico by rail.

Feb. 19, 2014: A Nebraska judge rules that the law that allowed the governor to approve Keystone XL over the objections of landowners was unconstitu­tional. Nebraska said it would appeal.

April 18, 2014: The State Department suspends the regulatory process indefinite­ly, citing uncertaint­y about the court case in Nebraska.

Nov. 4, 2014: TransCanad­a says the costs of Keystone XL have grown to US$8 billion from US$5.4 billion.

November-December 2014: Midterm elections turn control of the U.S. Congress over to Republican­s, who say they’ll make acceptance of Keystone XL a top priority. But Obama adopts an increasing­ly negative tone.

Jan. 9, 2015: At the

Nebraska Supreme Court, by the narrowest of margins, a panel of seven judges strikes down the lower-court decision.

Jan. 29, 2015: The U.S. Senate approves a bill to build Keystone XL, but the White House says Obama would veto it.

Feb. 24, 2015: Obama vetoes the bill.

June 30, 2015: TransCanad­a writes to then-secretary of state John Kerry and other U.S. officials saying the State Department should include recent climate change policy announceme­nts by the Alberta and federal government­s in its review of Keystone XL.

Nov. 2, 2015: TransCanad­a asks the U.S. government to temporaril­y suspend its applicatio­n.

Nov. 4, 2015: The U.S. government rejects that request.

Nov. 6, 2015: The Obama administra­tion rejects TransCanad­a’s applicatio­n to build the Keystone XL pipeline. TransCanad­a CEO Russ Girling says he is disappoint­ed, but continues to believe the project is in the best interests of both Canada and the U.S.

Jan. 6, 2016: TransCanad­a files notice to launch a claim under Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement, alleging the U.S. government breached its legal commitment­s under NAFTA. The company also files a lawsuit in U.S. Federal Court in

Texas arguing that Obama exceeded his powers by denying constructi­on of the project.

May 26, 2016: Republican presidenti­al contender

Donald Trump says he would approve Keystone XL if elected, a pledge he repeats several times during the campaign.

Jan. 24, 2017: Trump signs an executive order that he says approves Keystone XL, but suggests the United States intends to renegotiat­e the terms of the project. He also signs an order requiring American pipelines to be built with U.S. steel.

Nov. 9, 2018: A U.S. federal judge blocks the pipeline’s constructi­on to allow more time to study the potential environmen­tal impact.

March 29, 2019: Trump issues a new presidenti­al permit in an effort to speed up developmen­t of the pipeline

May 3, 2019: TransCanad­a changes its name to TC Energy.

March 31, 2020: Alberta agrees to invest $1.5 billion in Keystone XL, followed by a $6 billion loan guarantee in 2021.

April 7, 2020: Constructi­on begins, despite calls from Indigenous groups and environmen­talists to pause their efforts.

May 18, 2020: Joe Biden, then the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, vows to scrap Keystone XL if elected, but doesn’t set out a timeline for doing so.

Nov. 3, 2020: Biden is elected president.

Jan. 17, 2021: Transition documents show Biden plans to cancel Keystone XL on the first day of his presidency.

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