Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fact Check: Keystone pipeline not as bad for environment or as good for economy as claimed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2015 10:55 AM

    WASHINGTON — Supporters of the Keystone XL pipeline, which would run about 1,900 kilometres from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, say the $8 billion project of Calgary-based TransCanada Corp. is a critically needed piece of infrastructure that will create thousands of jobs and make the U.S. dependent on oil from friends, rather than foes.

    Critics claim it will disastrously increase the pollution blamed for global warming and put communities along its route at risk for a damaging spill, all for oil and products that will be exported anyway.

    Which is it? As pipeline supporter Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) puts it, "You're entitled to your own opinion, you're just not entitled to your own facts."

    A check of some of the claims about the pipeline as a bill approving it heads toward likely passage by the Republican-led Senate and a veto by President Barack Obama:

    ___

    CLAIM: Keystone is worse for global warming.

    THE FACTS: Extracting oil from Canadian oilsands does require more energy — and results in 17 per cent more greenhouse gas emissions from oil well to tailpipe than a traditional barrel of oil refined in the United States. But a March 2013 analysis by the State Department concluded that the oilsands are likely to be developed regardless of whether the pipeline is approved. And it said shipping the oil by rail to existing oil pipelines or to oil tankers would release more greenhouse gases than shipping the oil via pipelines from Canada to Gulf Coast refineries.

    ___

    CLAIM: Keystone is good for jobs.

    THE FACTS: The State Department estimated that construction spending "would support a combined total of approximately 42,100 jobs throughout the United States for the up to two-year construction period." It added that not all the employment would be new, though. It said some of the jobs would be "continuity of existing jobs in current or new locations," a distinction often overlooked by the bill's supporters. Once the project opens, it would require "approximately 50 total employees in the United States: 35 permanent employees and 15 temporary contractors," the State Department estimated.

    ___

    CLAIM: The oil — and product refined from it — will be exported, so the U.S. bears the environmental risk from the pipeline with little economic reward from the oil.

    THE FACTS: Without lifting the decades-long export ban on crude, the oil that would be transported via the pipeline couldn't be exported. But the gasoline, diesel and other products made from the oil at Gulf Coast refineries could be shipped abroad, a trend that is already on the rise. In 2011, for the first time since 1949, the U.S. exported more products refined from oil than it imported. In 2012, these products were the single largest U.S. export.

    A portion of the gasoline and diesel made from the oil transported down the Keystone XL pipeline will no doubt end up in the global marketplace. As new efficiency standards, coupled with increasing environmental awareness, start to reduce U.S. oil consumption, demand is rising abroad. But these exports still would confer some economic value to the U.S., including to the refiners that buy the oil and sell the product.

    ___

    CLAIM: Lower oil prices, and the U.S. oil boom, mean the pipeline's not needed.

    THE FACTS: Oil prices always have been volatile, and both the pipeline company and the oil refiners and producers using the pipeline expect prices to rise and plunge throughout the project's life. Refiners still want the oil, especially the type that the Keystone XL pipeline would provide. TransCanada stands to make more money from the project now than it did when it was first proposed, because most of the cost will be paid by its customers. And despite the fact that the U.S. is now the largest oil producer in the world, consumption still greatly outpaces production. Imports have been reduced, but in 2013, the U.S. still imported 2.8 billion barrels of oil. About 45 per cent came from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which represents numerous countries in the Middle East.

    Canada, without the pipeline, supplied the U.S. with 941 million barrels, making it the largest exporter of crude to the U.S. outside of OPEC.

    ____

    Follow Dina Cappiello on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dinacappiello

    Fact Check: An occasional look at political claims that take shortcuts with the facts or don't tell the full story

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria

    Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria
    VICTORIA — A former CBC radio host hopes to take her fight for the embattled public broadcaster all the way to Parliament Hill.

    Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria

    RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006

    RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006
    SURREY, B.C. — Surrey RCMP say they have made an arrest in a historic homicide dating back to 2006. Mahdi Halane was shot in the neck following a confrontation at a gas station in October 2006.

    RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006

    Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband

    Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A woman who died in a mobile-home fire in Chase, B.C., last week was the victim in a domestic-dispute case in 2007 and charged with killing her husband less than a year later.

    Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband

    Pineapple Express Drenches Vancouver Before Moving On To Central Coast Of B.C.

    Pineapple Express Drenches Vancouver Before Moving On To Central Coast Of B.C.
    The Pineapple Express that drenched the Vancouver area is now drifting north, with heavy downpours expected to pummel the central coast of British Columbia.

    Pineapple Express Drenches Vancouver Before Moving On To Central Coast Of B.C.

    LNG Pipeline Deals With B.C. Nets First Nation Millions Of Dollars

    LNG Pipeline Deals With B.C. Nets First Nation Millions Of Dollars
    VICTORIA — Millions of dollars are expected to flow to a First Nation in British Columbia's northwest as a result of two new deals tied to proposed liquefied-natural-gas pipelines.

    LNG Pipeline Deals With B.C. Nets First Nation Millions Of Dollars

    Crash At Surrey And North Delta Intersection Sends Police Officer, Mother And Tot To Hospital

    Crash At Surrey And North Delta Intersection Sends Police Officer, Mother And Tot To Hospital
    NORTH DELTA, B.C. — A pregnant mother, a toddler and a police officer were all taken to hospital as a precaution after a collision in a Metro Vancouver intersection. 

    Crash At Surrey And North Delta Intersection Sends Police Officer, Mother And Tot To Hospital