Waterloo Region Record

Making it official

Trump approves Keystone XL: ‘Great day for American jobs’

- Alexander Panetta

WASHINGTON — Canada’s hotly-debated, long-delayed Keystone XL pipeline received its elusive U.S. presidenti­al permit from Donald Trump Friday, eight years and six months after the initial applicatio­n for it to cross the American border.

The president made the announceme­nt at the White House.

He was accompanie­d by the president of TransCanad­a Corp., the Calgary-based pipeline company that has wrestled with lawsuits, resistant landowners, protesters and Washington Democrats.

“You’ve been waiting for a long, long time,” Trump said to TransCanad­a’s Russ Girling.

“It’s a great day for American jobs and a historic moment for North America and energy independen­ce. This announceme­nt is part of a new era of American energy policy that will lower costs for American families, ... reduce our dependence on foreign oil and create thousands of jobs.”

That doesn’t guarantee the pipeline gets built.

That’s because the removal of one big obstacle in Washington hasn’t done anything to eliminate other ones still sprinkled around the American Midwest, where opponents still hope to drown the project in protests and lawsuits.

The likely epicentre of the coming battle is Nebraska, the very place where opposition to Keystone began, years ago. TransCanad­a must still reach deals with some landowners there, it lacks a state permit and faces possible court challenges there and in South Dakota.

Keystone opponents swiftly linked their cause to the broader anti-Trump movement.

“This isn’t game over, it’s game on,” Stephen Kretzmann, executive director of Oil Change Internatio­nal, said in a statement that insulted Trump.

“Now we have a president who is deeply beholden to the oil industry and will do anything they ask, so this approval is no surprise ... Put your tiny hands in the air, Trump, and back away from the climate.”

Trump, meanwhile, has been eager to talk about projects like Keystone.

His young presidency has been consumed lately by problemati­c issues: an unpopular health reform and Russian election-meddling. Even as he made the Keystone announceme­nt, reporters in the Oval Office shouted questions about the potential collapse of the health bill. At that very moment, networks were carrying a congressio­nal committee announceme­nt that Trump’s former campaign manager would be questioned in its Russia probe.

Trump says he wants to move on to jobs and the economy.

Keystone XL would mean thousands of temporary constructi­on jobs and a permanent, annual boost in tax revenues for communitie­s along the route, which would stretch from Canada to an already completed southern portion now pumping oil to refineries on the Gulf of Mexico.

It’s unclear if constructi­on could start this year.

The Nebraska permit alone could take up to eight months, said Canada’s Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr. He welcomed the U.S. announceme­nt, but pointed out the process is far from over.

“We in Canada know that pipeline decisions can be controvers­ial,” Carr told reporters in Ottawa. “(But) you would assume that these approvals would lead to a completed pipeline project. We think this is a good day for the Canada-U.S. energy relationsh­ip.”

He declined to say if a completed Keystone would enter the calculus of whether the country needs another, larger project from TransCanad­a. Carr said the Energy East plan to move oil to the Atlantic Coast is undergoing an independen­t review.

U.S. regulators conducted their own, favourable reviews before politician­s stepped in.

American government studies concluded that the pipeline would have negligible impact on the environmen­t — and potentiall­y even a beneficial one, as a cleaner alternativ­e to oil transport by rail.

But opponents disputed the conclusion.

They pointed to the worst-case scenario calculated by U.S. regulators, and argued that it’s actually becoming reality — that if oil prices remain low, and no other pipelines get built, Alberta oilsands expansion would slow, and emissions would drop, without Keystone.

Hearing this pressure from the political left, Barack Obama rejected the project.

In response, TransCanad­a filed a challenge under Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement, alleging the U.S. government breached its legal commitment­s under NAFTA. That challenge has been dropped, TransCanad­a said Friday.

Republican­s had repeatedly promised to reverse Obama’s decision. That included Trump, who had often discussed the Keystone approval as a fait accompli, telegraphi­ng intentions that the market received long ago.

“We believe that the receipt of the presidenti­al permit was expected by the market,” RBC Capital Markets said in a note to clients. “We note that KXL is not included in our valuation for the stock and if the project moves forward, we view that as upside.”

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 ?? ALEX PANETTA, THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The presidenti­al permit doesn’t guarantee the pipeline will be built; it faces state hurdles first, including lawsuits and protests.
ALEX PANETTA, THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The presidenti­al permit doesn’t guarantee the pipeline will be built; it faces state hurdles first, including lawsuits and protests.

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