Chattanooga Times Free Press

Keystone pipeline not a done deal yet

- BY EVAN HALPER

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump reignited a bruising battle over the nation’s energy future that environmen­talists had hoped was behind them when he announced Friday his administra­tion has issued a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline.

Although Trump portrayed the pipeline as a done deal now, its future remains uncertain. It faces difficult economic issues as well as a newly revived protest movement dedicated to stopping it.

The project, which would ship more than 800,000 barrels of oil daily from Canada’s tar sands to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries, was rejected by the Obama administra­tion last year after a decade of protest by climate activists, land owners and Native Americans. The rejection came just before President Barack Obama signed an internatio­nal agreement on global warming in Paris.

The new administra­tion reversed that decision Friday, as Trump moved to fulfill his vow to undo the previous administra­tion’s work on climate change and aggressive­ly promote oil developmen­t.

“It is going to be an incredible pipeline,” Trump said, to be built with “the greatest technology known to man or women.”

At the White House session where he announced the decision, the president credited himself with reviving a project that developer TransCanad­a Corp.’s immense lobbying team had been unable to move forward over a period of years.

“I hope you didn’t pay your consultant­s anything,” Trump told TransCanad­a Chief Executive Russell Girling. “In fact, I hope you get back the hundreds of millions that you paid them because they didn’t do a damn thing except get you a ‘no’ vote.”

Yet the project still has a long way to go. Keystone was conceived at a time of significan­tly higher oil prices. Its developers had not envisioned prices would drop and remain so low, for so long.

Extracting oil from the tar sands is expensive, and it remains to be seen if the project will ultimately cost out. There are also significan­t remaining legal hurdles for TransCanad­a to overcome.

The White House already has retreated from a demand that the builders of the pipeline use American steel — a provision Trump announced with considerab­le fanfare. That requiremen­t would have raised the cost of the project substantia­lly.

Instead, about half the steel for the pipeline would be imported, much of it from India and some from a Canadian company owned by a wealthy Russian. White House officials said they exempted the project from Trump’s buy-American order because it was already underway at the time the order was signed.

Trump appeared surprised to learn Friday that TransCanad­a still has work to do before it can proceed.

“The bottom line: Keystone, they are finished,” he said. “They are going to start constructi­on when?”

Girling explained the company has yet to secure the necessary permits in Nebraska, a process that involves multiple stakeholde­rs and will take months.

“Nebraska?” Trump said. “I’ll call Nebraska. They have a great governor.”

That call may not do much for the pipeline. The decision in Nebraska rests in the hands of an independen­t commission, with members elected by voters. It will soon be taking testimony from dozens of stakeholde­rs determined to stop constructi­on.

“We will never allow an inch of this foreign steel pipeline that can pollute our water and take away our property rights and has threatened treaty rights of tribes here,” said Jane Kleeb, president of the Bold Alliance, an advocacy group started in Nebraska to oppose the project.

Her group is among many that have mobilized to fight. They are organizing street protests, planning for encampment­s along the pipeline route and drafting briefs for what they say will be a deluge of legal action.

The State Department was formally responsibl­e for the permit TransCanad­a was given to construct a line that crosses the U.S. border. The department concluded that building Keystone is in the national interest, reversing the view of the Obama administra­tion.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, the former chief executive of Exxon Mobil Corp., recused himself from the decision-making process. The permit was signed by Tom Shannon, a career diplomat serving as undersecre­tary of state for political affairs.

Environmen­tal groups say the approval, like other ambitious executive actions made by the Trump administra­tion early in its tenure, such as the ban on travel to U.S. from several predominan­tly Muslim nations, is legally vulnerable. The executive order to revive Keystone, which Trump issued in January, gave State Department staff only 60 days to re-review TransCanad­a’s applicatio­n, and no public comment was taken.

The department did not update the environmen­tal impact study for the pipeline, a process that could have taken years. It instead relied on an assessment completed in 2014.

“The State Department violated key environmen­tal review laws in its haste,” said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club.

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