Toronto Star

Environmen­tal groups fight KXL despite Biden promise

Incoming U.S. president says he’ll rescind project, but backers are pushing forward

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON— Critics of Canada’s most controvers­ial cross-border pipeline projects aren’t taking their demise for granted under president-elect Joe Biden.

A new report from the U.S.-based Rainforest Action Network says two of them — Keystone XL and Enbridge’s Line 3 pipeline — are being “rammed through” in the final weeks of Donald

Trump’s presidency.

The report points to a long list of prominent internatio­nal banks it says are lined up to back the projects as evidence they are far from dead.

Biden’s campaign has already made it clear the president-elect intends to rescind presidenti­al permits for TC Energy’s Keystone XL project once he takes office.

But Jason Disterhoft, the report’s author, says there’s an effort afoot to make it difficult for Biden to follow through on that commitment.

Disterhoft says it will fall to the banks

to decide in the coming months whether to honour their own commitment­s to limiting the emissions that cause climate change.

“It’s last call at the Trump bar,” said Disterhoft, the network’s senior campaigner on the climate and energy file.

“(Keystone XL) is the project that they’re trying to push through as much as they can, and make it as hard as possible for the Biden administra­tion to follow through on its promise.”

Biden has been silent on Line 3, which aims to replace an existing line between Edmonton and Enbridge’s facilities in Superior, Wis. And he’s not said a word about Keystone XL since his campaign issued a statement back in May.

Still, the deck appears stacked against it: Biden has named former secretary of state John Kerry, whose advice led thenpresid­ent Barack Obama to reject Keystone XL in 2015, as a special envoy on climate.

Publicly, at least, environmen­tal groups like the Sierra Club are taking his campaign officials at their word.

“President-elect Biden has committed to acting immediatel­y to rescind the permits for Keystone XL, and we are confident that he will fulfil that commitment,” senior Sierra Club lawyer Doug Hayes said in a statement.

“Rescinding Donald Trump’s ‘presidenti­al permit’ and other necessary federal approvals will leave TC Energy with no path forward and stop this dangerous tarsands pipeline proposal once and for all.”

Biden himself has yet to enunciate the commitment his campaign made to rescind the permit issued by Trump in 2017, said Eric Miller, a Canada-U.S. expert and president of the Rideau Potomac Strategy Group in Washington.

And politicall­y, it’s easier to deny a permit, which Obama did in 2015, than to rescind an existing one, he said.

“All the Biden administra­tion has to do is nothing, just do nothing, and let it be built,” Miller said. “It sends a much bigger signal — and will become, I think, a very big problem — if the Keystone XL permit were to be rescinded.”

Proponents, including Canada’s diplomatic corps in Washington and TC Energy itself, are calling for cross-border pipeline projects to be part of a broader, climate-friendly conversati­on about a North American energy and environmen­t strategy. Both Keystone XL and its principal architect have evolved significan­tly since the Obama administra­tion — with Biden as vice-president — rejected it five years ago, Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s ambassador to the U.S., said last month.

Calgary-based TC Energy is “constantly evaluating” new ways to reduce its carbon footprint and improve efficienci­es in order to be part of the “North American transition to the next generation of renewable energy sources,” said spokespers­on Terry Cunha.

The math, however, simply doesn’t work, Disterhoft said. Both Keystone XL and Line 3 will ensure higher production from the Alberta oilsands for at least the next 10 years, making the goal of zero emissions by 2050 an impossibil­ity.

“Investment in tarsands infrastruc­ture now threatens to lock in production for decades, at a time when the sector should be in a managed decline on a path to a zero-carbon economy.”

Constructi­on on the Minnesota portion of Line 3 began earlier this month after state authoritie­s granted a final permit and regulators rejected a challenge from two First Nations groups.

That project doesn’t face the same political and public opposition as Keystone XL, although Disterhoft said political leaders across Minnesota are under pressure to intervene, and Biden has been asked to review the project’s federal approvals.

“If you’re looking at one area where the Biden administra­tion is going to tear itself to pieces, it’s on energy and climate,” Miller said.

Joe Biden has yet to enunciate the commitment his campaign made to rescind the permit issued by Donald Trump in 2017

 ?? ADAM FONDREN RAPID CITY JOURNAL FILE PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A new report on the Keystone XL pipeline project says there’s an effort afoot to make it difficult for U.S. president-elect Joe Biden to follow through on his commitment to rescind the presidenti­al permits signed by Donald Trump.
ADAM FONDREN RAPID CITY JOURNAL FILE PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A new report on the Keystone XL pipeline project says there’s an effort afoot to make it difficult for U.S. president-elect Joe Biden to follow through on his commitment to rescind the presidenti­al permits signed by Donald Trump.

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