Regina Leader-Post

Kerry says U.S. won’t be rushed on Keystone

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON — The U.S. government says it won’t be pushed into making a decision on the long-delayed Keystone pipeline, suggesting Friday that the ongoing lobbying from its northern neighbour won’t carry much influence.

That statement came from U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry as he stood next to his Canadian counterpar­t, John Baird, the foreign affairs minister who has used his three-day U.S. trip to demand a decision soon.

The secretary of state was asked about the pressure from Baird and from Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who has said Canada won’t “take no for an answer” and will pursue the project regardless of the U.S. decision.

Kerry’s reply: business as usual.

“Well, I always answer my Canadian friend, but I have to do it according to our administra­tive process and the rules and regulation­s under which I have to operate, and I think he understand­s that,” said Kerry, whose department is leading the latest regulatory review of the project.

“We are currently engaged in the environmen­tal impact statement analysis. An analysis will be made with respect to the national interest, ultimately. And we’re just not at that point yet.”

An intense level of public interest in the project and its possible ramificati­ons has added to the complexity, Kerry suggested.

“There were a lot of questions that were raised in all of the public comment period, and those comments have necessitat­ed appropriat­e answers,” he said.

“The public has a role in this. We’re all accountabl­e to our publics. The democratic process demands that we do that.”

How long will it take? Eleven months ago, just after he was sworn in, Kerry said he hoped to have an answer in the near future. Nearly a year later, he’s not much more committal on the time frame.

“I can promise our friends in Canada that all the appropriat­e effort has been put into trying to get this done effectivel­y and rapidly,” Kerry said.

Baird spent three days in Washington pushing for a decision because he said the industry can’t be left in limbo. He expressed hope for a decision in the coming weeks, lest another constructi­on season be wasted. The industry, for its part, has said it’s wasted money filling out paperwork and buying equipment that’s sitting idle.

Industry insiders have also expressed shock at the degree to which the pipeline project — one of numerous ones across the continent — has become a political hot potato in the U.S.

Environmen­talists, frustrated with the U.S. failure to deliver a national plan on cap-and-trade, view the Keystone decision as a litmus test for President Barack Obama’s commitment to fighting climate change.

On the other side, Obama’s opponents have used the issue to beat up on him on economic grounds, arguing that his foot-dragging represents a failure to deliver jobs.

 ?? ALEX WONG/Getty Images ?? Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Mexican Foreign Secretary Jose Antonio Meade meet the press in Washington as Kerry hosted his
counterpar­ts to discuss climate change, energy security and other issue.
ALEX WONG/Getty Images Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Mexican Foreign Secretary Jose Antonio Meade meet the press in Washington as Kerry hosted his counterpar­ts to discuss climate change, energy security and other issue.

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