USA TODAY International Edition

Trump makes the right call on Keystone XL, Dakota Access

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Killing the pipelines never made sense. Refusing to build new pipelines, as a way to reduce greenhouse- gas emissions, is about as logical as halting constructi­on of any more gas stations. Like it or not, America’s economy and energy security still depend on petroleum, which powers 250 million vehicles on the nation’s highways. Keystone will give the U. S. a significan­t new supply of oil from a trusted neighbor.

The Obama administra­tion claimed the $ 8 billion Keystone project was never adequately evaluated, even though officials had scrutinize­d it for seven years. Environmen­talists claimed that exploiting the tar sands oil in Canada that the Keystone project would deliver to Gulf Coast refineries would mean “game over” for the planet.

But pipeline or no pipeline, the oil was never going to stay in the ground. There were always other pipeline routes, including one already approved by the Canadian government. Or there were trains and tractor- trailers, where the odds of deadly environmen­tal accidents are far worse.

As for the mostly completed Dakota Access pipeline, aimed at transporti­ng crude oil across the Dakotas and Iowa to Illinois, the Standing Rock Sioux raised concerns over where pipe would cross the Missouri River near their reservatio­n.

After mass demonstrat­ions last fall, the Army Corps of Engineers denied an oil- pipeline easement, effectivel­y killing the project. Now that it is being revived, the the Trump administra­tion would be well- advised to explore whether alternate routes can satisfy the tribe’s concerns.

Trump cast the moves as job creators, and that’s true in the short term, when thousands of workers will be brought on to lay pipe. But when the projects are completed, virtually all those jobs go away.

For environmen­talists, there are far more important fights to pick with a new administra­tion so clearly unconcerne­d about climate change. These include working to preserve vehicle fuel efficiency standards, promote clean power plants and save the Paris Agreement aimed at curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

Keystone XL and Dakota Access are neither destroyers of the environmen­t nor saviors of the economy. Sometimes, a pipeline is just a pipeline.

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