Ottawa Citizen

Oliver champions Keystone in D.C.

North America can be ‘energy independen­t within 20 years’

- WILLIAM MARSDEN

WASHINGTON Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver landed here Monday to sell the Keystone XL pipeline only to find a capital awash in a rising political crisis over Syria that has flushed the contentiou­s pipeline, along with all other issues, into the deep beyond.

Oliver met for an hour with Ernest Moniz, a nuclear physicist and environmen­talist who became U.S energy secretary in May. Among the topics of discussion were Keystone XL, reducing the environmen­tal footprint of nonconvent­ional oil production such as the oilsands and sharing energy and environmen­tal technologi­cal research, Oliver said.

“Secretary Moniz and I discussed opportunit­ies to enhance our collaborat­ion including the importance of modern energy infrastruc­ture and reinforcin­g its safety, developing unconventi­onal oil and gas resources responsibl­y, supporting responsibl­e use of energy, demonstrat­ing joint global leadership on energy and environmen­tal issues,” he said.

Keystone XL, which is expected to transport more than 800,000 barrels of oil a day primarily from the oilsands, remains key to the oilsands expansion strategy. This visit marked Oliver’s fifth official trip to sell the project.

While pipeline safety issues were discussed, the July 6 oil train explosion in Lac-Megantic, Que., that killed 47 people was not.

Once again, Oliver contended at a subsequent news conference that Canada is doing its best to reduce oilsands greenhouse gas emissions. While he emphasized that emissions per unit of production have decreased, he acknowledg­ed that overall emissions continue to rise.

He again noted that Canada has aligned its overall reduction goals with those of the U.S. These include a 17-percent reduction of 2005 levels by 2020. Oliver said Canada is about halfway there. Oliver also said that Canada’s energy efficiency is among the best in the world. He said oilsands companies are working to reduce to zero the emissions difference between oilsands and convention­al oils.

Danielle Droitsch, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council’s Canada project, which has been campaignin­g against Keystone XL, noted that while U.S. emissions have fallen, Canada’s continue to rise.

“The Keystone XL tarsands pipeline will worsen carbon pollution,” she said in a statement. “The real climate solution is for the United States and Canada to co-operate on a clean energy partnershi­p.”

Oliver refused to comment on a recent letter sent to U.S. President Barack Obama by Prime Minister Stephen Harper that purportedl­y offered greater emission reductions should Obama approve the Keystone XL project.

Oliver said Canada must improve its greenhouse gas record so it can obtain society’s support — what he called a “social licence” — to continue to develop oilsands resources. He denied that any new commitment­s amount to “concession­s” to the U.S.

Despite rising U.S. oil production, U.S. energy figures predict that the U.S. will still need to import 7.4 million barrels a day by 2035. “The Keystone pipeline will help meet that demand,” he said. “For America the Keystone XL represents a secure, stable source of energy.”

He said North America “can be energy independen­t within the next 20 years.”

TransCanad­a Pipelines has been seeking approval for the $5.3-billion Keystone XL project since 2008. The final approval rests with Obama.

In 2011, with an upcoming election, Obama denied permission because part of the pipeline route traversed the ecological­ly sensitive Nebraska Sandhills and it lacked state support. Obama suggested TransCanad­a reapply.

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