Houston Chronicle

Company cancels Keystone XL pipeline

Long-delayed project dropped after Biden revoked permit on environmen­tal concerns

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, Mont. — The sponsor of the Keystone XL crude oil pipeline pulled the plug on the contentiou­s project Wednesday after Canadian officials failed to persuade President Joe Biden to reverse his cancellati­on of its permit on the day he took office.

Calgary-based TC Energy said it would work with government agencies “to ensure a safe terminatio­n of and exit” from the partly built line, which was to transport crude from the oil sand fields of western Canada to Steele City, Neb., connecting there to other pipelines that feed refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast.

Constructi­on on the 1,200-mile pipeline began last year when former President Donald Trump revived the long-delayed project after it had stalled under the Obama administra­tion. It would have moved up to 830,000 barrels of crude daily.

Biden canceled the pipeline’s border crossing permit in January over longstandi­ng concerns that burning oil sands crude could make climate change worse and harder to reverse.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had objected to the move, raising tensions between the U.S. and Canada. Officials in Alberta, where the line originated, expressed frustratio­n in recent weeks that Trudeau wasn’t pushing Biden harder to reinstate the pipeline’s permit.

Alberta invested more than $1

billion in the project last year, kick-starting constructi­on that had stalled amid determined opposition to the line from environmen­talists and Native American tribes along its route.

Alberta officials said Wednesday that they reached an agreement with TC Energy, formerly known as TransCanad­a, to exit that partnershi­p. The company and province plan to try to recoup the government’s investment, although neither offered any immediate details on how that would happen.

“We remain disappoint­ed and frustrated with the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the Keystone XL project, including the cancellati­on of the presidenti­al permit for the pipeline’s border crossing,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said in a statement.

The province had hoped the pipeline would spur increased developmen­t in the oil sands and bring tens of billions of dollars in royalties over decades.

Climate change activists viewed the expansion of oil sands developmen­t as an environmen­tal disaster that could speed up global warming. That turned Keystone into a flashpoint in the climate debate, and it became the focus of rallies and protests in Washington, D.C., and other cities.

Environmen­talists who had fought the project since it was first announced in 2008 said its cancellati­on marks a “landmark moment” in the effort to curb the use of fossil fuels.

“Good riddance to Keystone XL,” said Jared Margolis with the Center for Biological Diversity, one of many environmen­tal groups that sued to stop it.

On Montana’s Fort Belknap Reservatio­n, tribal president Andy Werk Jr. described the end of Keystone as a relief to Native Americans who stood against it out of concerns a line break could foul the Missouri River or other waterways.

Attorneys general from 21 states had sued to overturn Biden’s cancellati­on of the pipeline, which would have created thousands of constructi­on jobs. Republican­s in Congress have made the cancellati­on a frequent talking point in their criticism of the administra­tion, and even some moderate Senate Democrats including Montana’s Jon Tester and West Virginia’s Joe Manchin had urged Biden to reconsider.

Tester said in a statement Wednesday that he was disappoint­ed in the project’s demise, but he made no mention of Biden.

Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, the top Republican on the Senate energy committee, was more direct: “President Biden killed the Keystone XL Pipeline, and with it, thousands of good-paying American jobs.”

A White House spokespers­on didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on TC Energy’s announceme­nt. In his Jan. 20 cancellati­on order, Biden said allowing the line to proceed “would not be consistent with my administra­tion’s economic and climate imperative­s.”

TC Energy said in canceling the pipeline that the company is focused on meeting “evolving energy demands” as the world transition­s to different power sources. It said it has $7 billion in other projects under developmen­t.

Keystone XL’s price tag had ballooned as the project languished, increasing from $5.4 billion to $9 billion. Meanwhile, oil prices fell significan­tly — from more than $100 a barrel in 2008 to under $70 in recent months — slowing developmen­t of Canada’s oil sands and threatenin­g to eat into any profits from moving the fuel to refineries.

A second TC Energy pipeline network, known simply as Keystone, has been delivering crude from Canada’s oil sands region since 2010. The company says on its website that Keystone has moved more than 3 billion barrels of crude from Alberta and an oil loading site in Cushing, Okla.

 ?? Associated Press file photos ?? The Keystone XL oil pipeline would have crossed into the United States from Canada in Phillips County, Mont. Calgary-based TC Energy said Wednesday it is pulling the plug on the project.
Associated Press file photos The Keystone XL oil pipeline would have crossed into the United States from Canada in Phillips County, Mont. Calgary-based TC Energy said Wednesday it is pulling the plug on the project.
 ??  ?? Critics of President Joe Biden’s decision to cancel Keystone’s permit say the pipeline would have created thousands of jobs.
Critics of President Joe Biden’s decision to cancel Keystone’s permit say the pipeline would have created thousands of jobs.

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