Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on November 19, 2014

Bookmark and Share

Senate Rejects Keystone XL Pipeline

Senate Rejects Keystone XL Pipeline thumbnail

The Senate voted this evening to reject the Keystone XL pipeline that would have carried Alberta tar sands oil from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. The measure failed by a vote of 41-59. Sixty votes are required to pass a bill out of the Senate. The project has been stalled for six years due to widespread public opposition.

senatefail

The bill easily passed the House of Representatives last week, where it was on the floor for the ninth time since Republicans took control of that chamber. The Senate, controlled by Democrats, has not brought it to the Senate floor until now. The Senate bill was introduced by Democratic Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu, hoping to score points with voters in her oil-dependent state going into a closely contested runoff with her Republican opponent, Congressman Bill Cassidy. Cassidy was the sponsor of the latest bill in the House.

After introducing the bill last week, Landrieu worked feverishly to round up the 60 votes required to pass any legislation in the Senate, as anti-pipeline activists expressed outrage and charges of political grandstanding on Landrieu’s part. Landrieu responded indignantly to Kansas Senator Pat Roberts’ suggestion that she called for the vote for political reasons, saying on the floor of the Senate, “I was very disappointed in the senator from Kansas. I think he said he was ‘bemused’ that we would be debating this, because he thinks it’s some kind of political issue. “For him to come to the floor and make those remarks … is beneath the dignity of the state he represents and the Marine Corps.” (Roberts is a former Marine).

Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell did some showboating of his own, referring to the bill during debate as “Congressman Bill Cassidy’s Keystone jobs bill.” He continued that it was “common sense, a shovel-ready jobs project that will help thousands of Americans find work.” But this weekend, on ABC’s This Week, Russ Girling, CEO of TransCanada, the company building the pipeline, admitted that it would create at most 50 permanent jobs along with several thousand temporary ones, referring vaguely to 42,000 “direct and indirect ongoing and enduring jobs.” The Tampa Bay-Times PolitiFact feature rated that statement “false,” saying he based that figure on temporary multiplier jobs that would be created only during construction to service the workers, such as hotel workers, waitresses and entertainers.

Landrieu’s desperation led to even more hyperbole on the Senate floor during the debate:

 

Meanwhile, prior to the vote, protestors amassed outside Landrieu’s Washington, DC home where they installed a large inflatable pipeline. Four protesters were arrested outside Delaware Senator Tom Carper’s office. Carper has generally been pro-environment but indicated he would vote to approve Keystone XL. Another seven were arrested at Colorado Senator Michael Bennet’s office.

 

Two representatives of the campaign opposing Keystone XL in Nebraska where a lawsuit is currently blocking construction, Bold Nebraska director Jane Kleeb and rancher Randy Thompson, delivered a letter to Senator Mitch McConnell Monday night.

It said, “We are really sick and tired of being told how safe this project will be by people who live fifteen hundred miles away and are fully insulated from the inherent risks associated with it. Would you be so anxious to vote “yes” if this pipeline were going to run through your property where your family lives, works and plays? Our families will not watch our land and water get polluted so Canada can get their risky tar sands to the export market. You oil-soaked Senators should be ashamed of yourselves and if you have the nerve to talk about the constitution or property rights again, we will be there to set the record straight.”

Environmental groups prepared for the worst, as the vote locked close up until roll call, with approval seeming to hinge on perhaps a single vote. The Natural Resources Defense Council put out “8 discredited talking points pushed by Keystone XL proponents in Senate debate.”

And California Senator Barbara Boxer, a Keystone XL opponent said, “What does XL stand for? To me it stands for extra lethal. This is a serious environmental hazard.”

Senate majority leader Harry Reid of Nevada is opposed to the pipeline but he allowed it to come to a vote for the first time. Reid has joined with a multitude of environmental justice groups in calling on President Obama to veto it, which the President in the last week has strongly suggested he would if it passed. Soon-to-be Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell said it would be the first item of business when he assumes leadership of the Senate in January.

“We applaud the Senators who stood up for the health of our families and our climate by fighting back against this big polluter-funded sideshow,” said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club. “There’s no good reason the Senate should have wasted all this time on yet another meaningless push for Keystone XL. Since day one, the decision on the pipeline has belonged to President Obama, and he has repeatedly said he will reject this pipeline if it contributes to the climate crisis. As there is no doubt that it does, we remain confident that is precisely what he’ll do.”

Kleeb agrees with Brune, “Today’s defeat of Keystone XL should send a strong signal to the incoming GOP-led Congress that farmers and ranchers will never back down to their oil soaked intentions. We call on President Obama to stand up and reject Keystone XL now.”

EcoWatch



12 Comments on "Senate Rejects Keystone XL Pipeline"

  1. Makati1 on Wed, 19th Nov 2014 7:17 pm 

    A few more delays and it will be dropped due to no longer being needed. When the economy of North America crashes, so will the tar sands and fraking that require high oil prices to be profitable. About like the LNG ports that are being planned for. They may be finished just in time to be unnecessary. We can only hope.

  2. Nony on Wed, 19th Nov 2014 9:09 pm 

    The anti-infrastructure president. The anti-drilling president.
    Amazing how much the USA has done drilling on private and state land and sending stuff around by rail.

  3. Plantagenet on Wed, 19th Nov 2014 9:39 pm 

    Its bizarre that Obama wants oil to be transported by rail instead of by pipeline, considering the oil trains are much more dangerous.

  4. Dave Thompson on Wed, 19th Nov 2014 10:06 pm 

    The price of crude will go back up and the congress will have a fresh start next year. Plenty of time left to run that pipeline with tarsands and cook the planet.

  5. rockman on Wed, 19th Nov 2014 10:09 pm 

    Nony – “The anti-infrastructure president. The anti-drilling president.”
    It’s really amazing how such opinions of the POTUS have reached the level of urban legends. Anti-infrastructure? With all the endless chatter about the KXL permit I haven’t seen anyone else besides me post the story AND THE LINK of the POTUS standing in the construction yard of the southern leg of KXL proclaiming how critical it was to the nation’s economy that it be built to alleviate the chock point at Cushing, OK. that was inhibiting the delivery of oil sands production to Texas. He acknowledged ordering all fed depts to do everything possible to expedite this section of the pipeline. And the line, with a 600,000 bopd capacity, began moving oil last January. Previously other pipelines were reversed to help the process. And next month a new pipeline with a 450,000 bopd capacity goes into service moving oil sands production to Texas.

    Anti-drilling? Since the Macondo blow out the POTUS has authorized the leasing of over 100 million areas in the GOM including lease blocks offsetting the BP spill. And he’s also approved hundreds of drill permits out there.

    And it’s not just about oil/NG: the export of US coal (with much coming from federal lands and new leases) has grown more during the current administration then at anytime in the entire history of the US coal industry. And while the efforts by the POTUS to increase coal export capacity from the west coast has been met with local opposition. But not so in Texas here the POTUS has authorized a fast track for permits in increase capacity at from our coast.

    Truly amazing: the R’s/Fox don’t want to talk about it and give the POTUS credit and D’s/Green Peace don’t want to talk about and destroy the illusion of the “greenest POTUS in history”.

  6. Nony on Wed, 19th Nov 2014 11:05 pm 

    He went back on the VACAPES after saying he would open it. And he held up GOM for 2 years. He’s bad news. Even Art Berman said the boom happened IN SPITE of Obama.

  7. Nony on Wed, 19th Nov 2014 11:07 pm 

    And KXL is a complete joke how he has held that up for 6 years with this “decision” crap. Doesn’t even have the stones to just say no. And 550,000 bpd is some SIZEABLE transmission.

  8. Davy on Thu, 20th Nov 2014 5:34 am 

    Nony, listen to your elders. Rock, is spot on. We are dealing with politics. Last I heard politicians have constituents. O has to show some deference to the environmentalist. If anything O is a hypocrite by claiming to be out for environmentalists and the poor but if fact selling out to big money in the end. He did this with the banks and he is doing this with energy. He has tried to speak so eloquently about supporting the environment and the poor with little to show. Even O-care was a sell out to Insurance cO’s and big Pharm. At least he has kept his dick in his pants unlike Billy Bob another sell out. Keystone will be approved next year when the Repubs take control of congress. O is a lame duck ready to go down as one of the many lack luster Presidents in our history.

  9. Boat on Thu, 20th Nov 2014 5:50 am 

    Don’t forger the 27% of flared nat gas from the frackers. Mr O has done nothing to stop it. He aint green.

  10. Dredd on Thu, 20th Nov 2014 6:11 am 

    I concur in the judgment against another vein with which to carry the deathblood to deathsville.

  11. penury on Thu, 20th Nov 2014 9:49 am 

    Boat, just as a matter of interest, are you being rhetorical in blaming Obama? or are you seriously suggesting that the POTUS override the decision making usually reserved for the States, or Congress or for that matter other agencies of his administration? I will be waiting with bated breath to read the reactions to tonights talk on immigration.

  12. synapsid on Thu, 20th Nov 2014 3:41 pm 

    Boat,

    As penury points out, the states control fracking and other oilfield activities. And as rockman has pointed out more than once, North Dakota could stop all flaring in the state tomorrow if it chose, but has chosen not to stop all that money coming in.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *