National Post (National Edition)

Keystone XL foes vow long fight in Nebraska

HEARING CONCLUDES

- KEVIN O’HANLON

LINCOLN, NEB. • Opponents of the Keystone XL pipeline vowed on Thursday to block constructi­on of the controvers­ial project if Nebraska regulators approve the proposed route later this year.

Nebraska regulators wrapped up a final public hearing a day early on Thursday on TransCanad­a Corp.’s proposed Keystone XL pipeline after four days of contentiou­s exchanges between lawyers. They will make their final decision by Nov. 23.

After the hearing, two dozen landowners and other pipeline opponents vowed non-violent civil disobedien­ce if the commission rules in favour of TransCanad­a. The action, they said, would be similar to months-long protests in North Dakota led by the Standing Rock Sioux tribe against the Dakota Access pipeline.

“Standing Rock was a dress rehearsal compared to what this will be,” said Jane Kleeb, chair of Nebraska’s Democratic party and founder of anti-pipeline group the Bold Alliance, her voice cracking.

“We are not going to let an inch of foreign steel touch Nebraska soil.”

The proposed 1,897-km pipeline, linking Alberta oil sands to U.S. refineries, has been a lightning rod of controvers­y for nearly a decade.

The project has pit landowners and environmen­talists worried about greenhouse gas emissions, oil spills and environmen­tal contaminat­ion, against business advocates who say it will lower fuel prices, shore up national security and bring jobs.

Intervener­s in the hearing ranged from the landowners — mainly ranchers and farmers — to Indigenous peoples and TransCanad­a representa­tives. Each group made their case to the five elected members of the Public Service Commission about whether or not the proposed pipeline was in the “public interest.”

Just recently, TransCanad­a officials said they would only decide in December whether to proceed with the project after gauging demand from oil shippers and awaiting a decision from Nebraska’s Public Service Commission.

Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts, who was on a fiveday mission to Canada this week, said he was optimistic the commission will give the green light to Keystone XL, calling it “the safest pipeline ever built.”

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