Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

Over to you, Obama: Nebraska court clears path for presidential decision on Keystone

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jan, 2015 10:34 AM

    WASHINGTON — The Keystone XL pipeline decision now rests in President Barack Obama's hands, with a Nebraska court clearing an obstacle that has delayed a decision on the Canadian project.

    Obama had repeatedly said he couldn't finish a review on the project until Nebraska's Supreme Court ruled in a dispute over the route — and the verdict is in.

    Friday's judgment by the state supreme court will come as a relief to pipeline backers.

    By the narrowest of margins, a panel of seven judges struck down a lower-court decision that a state law approving the pipeline route was adopted by unconstitutional methods.

    Four judges out of seven today actually sided against the pipeline route — but that wasn't enough. In Nebraska, it takes a supermajority of five judges out of seven to declare a state law unconstitutional.

    "No member of this court opines that the law is constitutional," the ruling pointed out. "But the four judges who have determined that (the pipeline law) is unconstitutional, while a majority, are not a supermajority as required under the Nebraska Constitution...

    "Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s judgment."

    The end of the Nebraska case means the president can soon wrap up his administration's review into the project. Obama could also, in theory, sign a law expected to pass Congress but he has threatened to veto that legislation.

    Keystone legislation is now making its way through both houses of the U.S. Congress. It's expected to easily pass the House of Representatives, and undergo a series of amendments in the Senate as members stick their own priorities into the bill to increase its chances of passing.

    Project proponents hope that the lawmakers pack it with enough of the president's own priorities to tempt him into backing down on his unequivocal veto threat.

    Calgary-based TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) has been waiting for more than six years for a U.S. permit to build the $8-billion pipeline, which has become a major irritant in Canada-U.S. relations.

    The pipeline would connect to an existing TransCanada system, enabling some 830,000 barrels of crude per day, mostly from Alberta, to more directly reach the lucrative Gulf Coast market by cutting diagonally from the Saskatchewan-Montana border to Steele City, Neb.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Modi, Obama vow to take ties to next level

    Modi, Obama vow to take ties to next level
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday called India and US "natural global partners" and vowed with President Barack Obama to take their ties to the...

    Modi, Obama vow to take ties to next level

    US slaps sanctions on two Pakistan terror groups for helping LeT

    US slaps sanctions on two Pakistan terror groups for helping LeT
    The US has targeted two Pakistan-based terrorist organisations and frozen the assets of their leaders for providing financial support to Lashkar-e -Taeba...

    US slaps sanctions on two Pakistan terror groups for helping LeT

    Mayor shot dead by his wife in Los Angeles county

    Mayor shot dead by his wife in Los Angeles county
    Mayor of Bell Gardens, a town in Los Angeles county, Daniel Crespo died after his wife shot him several times during a domestic dispute, media reported Wednesday.....

    Mayor shot dead by his wife in Los Angeles county

    Dalai Lama: At 79, Living With Values And Hope

    Dalai Lama: At 79, Living With Values And Hope
    Revered by the Tibetans as a 'living god' and idolised in both the Orient and the West, the Dalai Lama, known for his simplicity and typical jovial style, transcends all barriers of religion, language and even distances.

    Dalai Lama: At 79, Living With Values And Hope

    Modi Meets Obama: New confidence, new excitement in India-US ties

    Modi Meets Obama: New confidence, new excitement in India-US ties
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday said there is “new confidence and new excitement” in the India-US relationship and said that both sides need to work to bring down the difference in their energy systems -- “120 volts (US) and 220 volts (India)” -- to bring them together.

    Modi Meets Obama: New confidence, new excitement in India-US ties

    'Chalein saath saath', US tells India

    'Chalein saath saath', US tells India
    Once shunned by America, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was the guest of honour at a private dinner hosted by US President Barack Obama ahead...

    'Chalein saath saath', US tells India