Montreal Gazette

Keystone XL’s south leg starts up

Opposition watches project ‘like a hawk’

- LAUREN KRUGEL THE CANADIAN PRESS

CALGARY — Canadian oilsands producers have a direct pipeline link between Alberta and the U.S. Gulf Coast with the official startup Wednesday of the Keystone XL pipeline’s southern leg.

The project’s opposition, meanwhile, vowed to watch the new pipeline “like a hawk” as it continues to urge President Barack Obama to reject the larger, more contentiou­s northern leg of the system.

“This morning, we have made a major change in where the largest refining hub in the world gets is oil,” said Alex Pourbaix, the executive in charge of oil pipelines at TransCanad­a Corp. the company building the line.

CEO Russ Girling described the $2.3-billion U.S. project as a “win-win-win” for U.S. Gulf refiners, who’ll get access to a cheaper, more secure source of crude, for North American crude producers, who’ll get a better price for their landlocked oil and for consumers, who may pay a cheaper price at the pump as expensive imports are supplanted.

The only losers, he said, are the foreign suppliers whose product will pushed out of the lucrative Gulf market.

“We’re seeing an enormous change in North American energy markets and how energy gets delivered,” Girling told a news conference Wednesday.

“The Gulf Coast pipeline was designed to connect North American oil production to North American markets.”

He said there’s “not a chance” that crude will be exported overseas from the Gulf — at least not in his lifetime — disputing a common assertion from pipeline opponents.

In 2010, TransCanad­a began shipping crude to U.S. Midwest refineries on its original Keystone system, extending the line a year later to Cushing, Okla., home to an enormous oil hub that’s been brimming with North American supplies.

The pipeline that came into service on Wednesday extends that line from Cushing to the Texas coast, where refiners are thirsty for Canadian crude to replace cargoes from places such as Venezuela.

Relatively meagre volumes of about 50,000 barrels per day of Canadian crude have been able to indirectly “wiggle” their way to the Gulf, Girling said. The new line means that this year, more than 10 times that amount could theoretica­lly be shipped to the Gulf Coast market on the Keystone System. TransCanad­a said the line will ship a mixture of Canadian heavy and light oil, plus some U.S. volumes, but that it’s impossible to predict what the percentage will be on any given day.

The Gulf Coast line was originally pitched as part of the Keystone XL project, but the Obama administra­tion rejected it a few years ago, citing environmen­tal concerns in Nebraska. However, the U.S. government invited TransCanad­a to reapply for a permit with some route changes. The company decided to break the project up into two parts, going ahead with the southern leg first, as it does not cross an internatio­nal border and therefore did not need a federal go-ahead to proceed.

Girling said he expects a final environmen­tal report from the U.S. State Department on the northern leg of Keystone XL within “weeks.” That pipeline would enable some 830,000 barrels a day of crude to flow from Alberta to Nebraska, linking up with the existing system. Its current price tag is $5.4 billion, but Girling says that’s going to go up in a “material” way due to delays in getting a permit.

Jane Kleeb, with the antipipeli­ne advocacy group Bold Nebraska, said that Wednesday marked a “very sad day” for those worried about their land in Texas and Oklahoma.

“We all know this pipeline is a huge risk to folks along the route,” she said.

“Citizens are not stopping. Citizens are watching this pipeline like a hawk.”

A TransCanad­a spokesman, Shawn Howard, said the company was installing additional sensors along the pipeline at valve sites — “redundant monitoring equipment” that “further enhances our monitoring and leak detection systems.”

Work on the additional sensors, which are not needed to safely operate the Gulf Coast project, should be completed shortly.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Protesters call on Barack Obama to reject the Keystone XL oil pipeline last year. The Harper government is now showing off its green credential­s as the proposal hangs in the balance.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Protesters call on Barack Obama to reject the Keystone XL oil pipeline last year. The Harper government is now showing off its green credential­s as the proposal hangs in the balance.

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