Houston Chronicle

Keystone XL may be sold for scrap if project ends

-

The Canadian province that invested $1.1 billion of taxpayers’ money in the controvers­ial Keystone XL project is now considerin­g the sale of pipe and materials to try to recoup some funds.

“If the project ends, there would be assets that could be sold, such as enormous quantities of pipe,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said in a press conference Monday. “That would offset constructi­on costs.”

With Joe Biden set to be sworn in this week, the president-elect’s campaign promise to cancel the crude pipeline’s license is haunting the Canadian oil sands industry. The decision may come via executive action on his first day in office, CBC News reported on Sunday, citing people it didn’t identify.

The government of Justin Trudeau has vowed to defend the project.

Alberta, home to the world’s third-largest crude reserves, has struggled for years with a lack of pipeline capacity to ship its crude to the U.S. Gulf Coast and other markets. TC Energy Corp.’s Keystone XL was one of the possible pipelines the industry was counting on to solve that.

The cancellati­on of Keystone XL would cost Alberta taxpayers just over $785 million, Kenney said.

In March, Kenney’s government agreed to fund the first year of constructi­on with a $1.1 billion investment and to guarantee $4.2 billion of loans as a way to jump-start constructi­on.

The province and TC Energy have a “solid legal basis” to recoup damages through the courts, Kenney also said.

The Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers said that canceling the project would kill thousands of jobs and offered to work with stakeholde­rs to find a solution to complete the pipeline.

 ?? Sue Ogrocki / Associated Pressi file ?? Miles of pipe for the Keystone XL project could be sold for scrap to help Canada recoup some losses, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said.
Sue Ogrocki / Associated Pressi file Miles of pipe for the Keystone XL project could be sold for scrap to help Canada recoup some losses, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States