Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ex Pipeline Exec: Keystone Xl Can Still Be Salvaged If Canada Acts On Climate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 01:03 PM
    CALGARY — A retired executive with pipeline builder TransCanada Corp. believes the long-stalled Keystone XL project can still be salvaged —  if incoming Liberal prime minister Justin Trudeau acts swiftly on climate change.
     
    Putting a price on carbon emissions is the last option Canada has available to persuade U.S. President Barack Obama to approve the controversial cross-border oilsands pipeline, said Dennis McConaghy, who left TransCanada (TSX:TRP) last year.
     
    He said it's been "enormously frustrating" to see Keystone XL stuck in limbo more than seven years after it was first proposed and feels it has not been dealt with fairly in the U.S. regulatory process.
     
    "Carbon pricing was the last alternative at accommodation that could have been tried. It's still available, perhaps, for our new prime minister," McConaghy said from London, Ont., where he's a visiting fellow at Western University's Ivey Business School.
     
    "I would hope that (Trudeau) would quickly engage with the president on that point. Because there's no pipeline that would be more valuable to Canada than XL."
     
    McConaghy's role at TransCanada was to develop new pipeline opportunities rather than oversee the nitty-gritty of obtaining permits and approvals.
     
    He stressed that he was sharing his personal views, not those of his former employer.
     
    Trudeau has expressed support for Keystone XL, the US$8-billion proposal that would enable 830,000 barrels a day of mostly oilsands crude to flow to the lucrative U.S. Gulf Coast market. During the campaign, Trudeau slammed the Conservatives' handling of the file.
     
    In a recent blog post for the Niskanen Center, a libertarian think-tank, McConaghy said outgoing Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper showed an "almost pathological resistance to carbon pricing" — even if it meant smoothing the way for Keystone XL.   
     
    "Such logic was beyond Harper," he wrote.
     
    "The Keystone XL pipeline project might have been salvaged if Harper had been more willing to see carbon pricing as a means to address environmental concerns. The failure to pursue approval of the pipeline through carbon pricing is one of the great missed opportunities of Harper’s last term as prime minister."
     
    Obama has made it clear he will not allow Keystone XL to be built if it worsens climate change and Democratic presidential contender Hillary Clinton has come out against the project.
     
    McConaghy said it does not appear that a string of State Department environmental reviews have been enough to convince Obama that the pipeline is environmentally benign.
     
    In the interview, McConaghy preferred not to dwell on Harper's missteps and focus instead on what can be done with a Liberal majority government in Ottawa.
     
    "I would hope our Canadian prime minister would be proactive in trying to at least say to the president: 'before you decide anything on this, talk to me.'"
     
    Some of the biggest oilsands operators, including Suncor Energy (TSX:SU), Cenovus Energy (TSX:CVE) and Shell have spoken out in favour of a carbon tax — so long as it applies to everyone and doesn't single out energy producers.
     
    But so far the companies whose pipelines carry oilsands crude to market — like TransCanada — have not said much publicly on that score.
     
    "We support efforts that will continue to demonstrate that Keystone XL meets the president's stated climate test that it won't significantly exacerbate GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions," said TransCanada spokesman Mark Cooper.
     
    "Five reports since 2010 and 17,000 pages of study by the U.S. State Department Keystone XL will not significantly impact the environment or the climate."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Imprisoned Canadian Journalist Mohamed Fahmy Suffering In Prison: Wife

    The wife of a Canadian journalist imprisoned in Egypt says her husband is trying to be strong but she knows he's having a hard time with being thrown behind bars yet again even though he's innocent.

    Imprisoned Canadian Journalist Mohamed Fahmy Suffering In Prison: Wife

    'Clean' Hydroelectric Power Poses Northern Methylmercury Threat: Study

    'Clean' Hydroelectric Power Poses Northern Methylmercury Threat: Study
    A new study by Harvard University researchers suggests hydroelectric projects will put more methylmercury pollution into northern ecosystems than climate change.

    'Clean' Hydroelectric Power Poses Northern Methylmercury Threat: Study

    Congress Working Committee Extends Sonia's Term By A Year, Lambasts Modi Government

    Congress Working Committee Extends Sonia's Term By A Year, Lambasts Modi Government
    BJP leader and union minister Smriti Irani hit hack at the Congress president over her "hawa baazi" remark, saying "whenever Sonia Gandhi targets us, people of India come to support Prime Minister Modi".

    Congress Working Committee Extends Sonia's Term By A Year, Lambasts Modi Government

    Flawed Science, Lack Of Consultation Cited As Ruling Ends Fracking Water Licence

    Flawed Science, Lack Of Consultation Cited As Ruling Ends Fracking Water Licence
    The Environmental Appeal Board has overturned a water licence granted to an oil and gas company in northeastern British Columbia, ruling the licence was based on bad science and bad faith.

    Flawed Science, Lack Of Consultation Cited As Ruling Ends Fracking Water Licence

    Public Fears Putting Uranium Mining On Same Footing As Shale Gas In Quebec

    Public Fears Putting Uranium Mining On Same Footing As Shale Gas In Quebec
    Fears about radioactive contamination may close the door to uranium mining in Quebec just as public angst shelved shale gas extraction in the province in 2011.

    Public Fears Putting Uranium Mining On Same Footing As Shale Gas In Quebec

    Second Attempted Child Abduction In Vancouver's Stanley Park, Police Arrest Man

    Second Attempted Child Abduction In Vancouver's Stanley Park, Police Arrest Man
    A two-year-old girl was grabbed by a man in Stanley Park's Lost Lagoon area around 2 p.m. on Monday. The girl's father confronted the man, who let go of the girl and ran off.

    Second Attempted Child Abduction In Vancouver's Stanley Park, Police Arrest Man