Montreal Gazette

EPA head quit over Keystone XL: report

- LEE-ANNE GOODMAN

WASHINGTON — The head of the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency resigned abruptly last week, reportedly to protest against the Obama administra­tion’s apparent plans to approve TransCanad­a’s Keystone XL pipeline in the coming months.

The U.S. environmen­tal movement is abuzz following a New York Post report that Lisa Jackson suddenly quit her job because she doesn’t want to be at the helm of the agency when the White House rubber-stamps the controvers­ial project.

That could happen as early as March or April, the paper suggested.

“She was going to stay on until November or December,” a source close to Jackson told the Post. “But this changed it. She will not be the EPA head when Obama supports (Keystone XL) getting built.”

The EPA is one of several federal agencies that’s been advising the Obama administra­tion on the $7-billion pipeline, a project that would carry millions of barrels of crude a week from Alberta’s carbon-intensive oilsands to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

The ultimate decision on Keystone XL’s fate rests with the State Department, since the pipeline crosses an internatio­nal border.

Jackson is Obama’s top environmen­tal adviser, appointed head of the agency soon after his inaugurati­on in 2008. Over the past four years, she’s pushed through the toughest new air and water pollution rules in more than 20 years and has frequently spoken out on climate change.

Under her watch, the EPA has also raised serious concerns about Keystone XL.

In July 2010, as TransCanad­a awaited a decision from the White House on the pipeline, the EPA sent a letter to the State Department calling its draft environmen­tal assessment of the project “inadequate.”

It chastised analysts for failing to address the greenhouse gas emissions associated with Keystone XL. The letter also urged the State Department to further examine pipeline safety and spill-response planning, as well as the impact on Canadian native communitie­s.

In October 2011, Jackson reiterated those concerns in an appearance at Howard University in Washington.

“This isn’t a little tiny pipeline, this is a pipeline that cuts our country literally in half,” she said.

Obama rejected the pipeline early last year, but invited TransCanad­a to file a new applicatio­n with an altered route that would skirt Nebraska’s ecological­ly sensitive Sand Hills region.

TransCanad­a did so, and is now awaiting word on approval from the State Department after getting the allclear from Nebraska.

Pipeline advocates say the project will create muchneeded jobs in the U.S. Midwest, and help end American dependence on oil from hostile OPEC regimes.

In the statement announcing her resignatio­n, the EPA said Jackson wanted to “pursue new challenges, time with her family and new opportunit­ies.”

A Capitol Hill source doubts Jackson’s resignatio­n is Keystone-related, suggesting instead she’s stepping down due to job fatigue.

Jackson has been a “javelin-catcher on a million issues,” the source said.

Being head of the environmen­tal watchdog is a thankless job, because “Congress hates the EPA,” the source added.

The real threat to Keystone, the source said, could be John Kerry, expected to soon be easily confirmed as the new secretary of state following Hillary Clinton’s resignatio­n.

Kerry has long stressed the need for the U.S. to combat its addiction to fossil fuels. His nomination by Obama has delighted environmen­talists.

In October 2011, Kerry, the head of the U.S. Senate’s foreign relations committee, vowed that no stone would remain unturned as senators examined the environmen­tal impact of Keystone XL.

“There’s a lot at stake here and I’ll do my best to leave no question unanswered, including every possible economic and environmen­tal considerat­ion before a final decision is made,” he said in a statement.

Shawn Howard, a spokesman for TransCanad­a, said the company is prepared to arm both Kerry and Jackson’s replacemen­t with as much informatio­n as possible.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Over the past four years, Lisa Jackson pushed through the toughest U.S. pollution rules in more than 20 years.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Over the past four years, Lisa Jackson pushed through the toughest U.S. pollution rules in more than 20 years.

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