Yahoo – AFP,
Andrew Beatty, Dave Clark, 6 Nov 2015
Washington
(AFP) - US President Barack Obama on Friday blocked the Keystone XL oil
pipeline that Canada sought to build into the United States, ruling it would
harm the fight against climate change.
The
long-awaited decision was a blow to Canada's new leader, Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau, and pipeline operator TransCanada warned that it may file an
application to renew the project.
But Obama,
with one eye on the upcoming global climate change summit in Paris, said
Keystone "would not serve the national interests of the United
States" and could prove an environmental hazard.
"America
is now a global leader when it comes to taking serious action to fighting
climate change," he said. "Frankly, approving this project would have
undercut that global leadership."
![]() |
Environmental
activists during a
demonstration in front of the White House
in Washington, DC
to protest against the
Keystone pipeline project, on February 3,
2014 (AFP
Photo/Jewel Samad)
|
"The
Canada-US relationship is much bigger than any one project and I look forward
to a fresh start with President Obama to strengthen our remarkable ties in a
spirit of friendship and cooperation," he said.
Although
the decision was not a surprise, TransCanada's shares fell sharply and the
company quickly vowed to resurrect its bid, implicitly suggesting Obama's 2017
successor my revive the plan.
"TransCanada
and its shippers remain absolutely committed to building this important energy
infrastructure project," chief executive Russ Girling said.
'Campaign
cudgel'
Public
opinion has been divided over the project on both sides of the border, and for
many, the debate has become a proxy for one on the broader issues of climate
change and pollution from Canada's tar sands.
Girling
alleged that "misplaced symbolism was chosen over merit and science"
in rejecting the project, but Obama was able to cite the detailed conclusions
of a large-scale US government investigation.
Obama said
that -- instead of bringing heavy tar sands crude 1,179 miles (1,900
kilometers) from Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico -- the US should develop clean
technologies that would bring jobs and energy security.
At the end
of the month, Obama will travel to Paris to help ink a global climate accord
aimed at limiting carbon emissions worldwide.
He said he
had called Trudeau and both leaders agreed to work together on energy and
climate issues.
US
Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell was less sanguine about the decision.
He accused
Obama of being "more interested in appeasing deep-pocketed special
interests and extremists than helping tens of thousands of Americans who could
have benefited from Keystone's good jobs."
Environmental
group Friends of the Earth said it was a victory for the "fight against
fossil fuels" -- boasting that "a routine decision to approve a
pipeline" had been transformed "into a leadership test on climate
change."
In his
remarks -- made at the White House, flanked by both Vice President Joe Biden
and Secretary of State John Kerry -- Obama suggested he thought lobbying
efforts on both sides had gone too far.
"For
years, the Keystone pipeline has occupied what I, frankly, consider an
overinflated role in our political discourse," Obama complained.
"It
became a symbol too often used as a campaign cudgel by both parties rather than
a serious policy matter," he said, adding it was neither the "silver
bullet for the economy, as was promised by some, nor the express lane to
climate disaster proclaimed by others."
Tortured
process
Calgary-based
TransCanada has spent the last seven years trying to get the project built and
said Friday after the decision that it may try to make another proposal.
But until
today, Obama's White House has adamantly refused to take a public stance, with
Obama hiding behind a tortured bureaucratic process led by the US State
Department.
That
review, Kerry said, has now concluded that the environmental risks of the
pipeline outweigh any possible economic benefits to the United States.
"While
it would facilitate the transportation to the United States of one of the
dirtiest sources of fuel on the planet, the proposed project by itself is
unlikely to significantly impact the level of crude extraction or the continued
demand for heavy crude oil at refineries in the United States," he said.
In recent
weeks, Obama's silence had become increasingly uncomfortable, with the Paris
meeting nearing and Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton -- who
once led the review as secretary of state -- saying it should not be approved.
TransCanada
earlier this week had tried to halt the review, a move that was rejected by US
government lawyers and now appears to have been an attempt to avert outright
rejection.
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