Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Protest

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Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Protest

Postby Laodicean » Tue Aug 23, 2011 7:49 pm



Over 160 Arrested in Ongoing Civil Disobedience Against Keystone XL Tar Sands Oil Pipeline

Fifty-two environmental activists were arrested Monday in front of the White House as part of an ongoing protest calling on the Obama administration to reject a permit for the 1,700-mile Keystone XL pipeline project, which would deliver Canada tar sands oil to refineries in Texas, and rather focus on developing clean energy. An estimated 2,000 people have signed up to hold sit-ins and commit other acts of civil disobedience outside the White House every day for the next two weeks — 162 have already been arrested since Saturday. Also joining the protest are indigenous First Nations communities in Canada and landowners along the Keystone XL pipeline’s planned route. An editorial in Sunday’s New York Times joined in calling on the State Department to reject the pipeline, noting that the extraction of petroleum from the tar sands creates far more greenhouse emissions than conventional production. Meanwhile, oil industry backers of the project emphasize what they say are the economic benefits of the $7 billion proposal. As the Obama administration remains undecided whether to approve the Keystone XL pipeline, we speak with Bill McKibben, who joins us from Washington, D.C., where he was released Monday after spending two nights in jail. He is part of Tar Sands Action, a group of environmentalists, indigenous communities, labor unions and scientific experts calling for action to stop the project. "This is the first real civil disobedience of this scale in the environmental movement in ages," McKibben says.


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http://www.democracynow.org/seo/2011/8/ ... oing_civil
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby Laodicean » Tue Aug 23, 2011 7:55 pm

Oops, sorry for the double post.
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby DrVolin » Tue Aug 23, 2011 7:56 pm

No problem. The other is no more.
all these dreams are swept aside
By bloody hands of the hypnotized
Who carry the cross of homicide
And history bears the scars of our civil wars

--Guns and Roses
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby Laodicean » Tue Aug 23, 2011 8:10 pm

Thanks, Dr. V.

Dispatches here: http://www.tarsandsaction.org/
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby Laodicean » Tue Aug 30, 2011 10:32 am

Image

Nation's Top Climate Scientist, 140 Others Arrested at White House

NASA's Dr. James Hansen, perhaps our nation's preeminent climate scientist, was arrested with over 140 others at the White House today. Scientists, environmentalists, farmers, students, and other concerned citizens were gathered in the nation's capitol to protest the proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline that threatens to ruin many pristine habitats and spell certain disaster for the global climate system. Their stirring acts of civil disobedience made for yet another dramatic day in the series of scheduled protests that continue to put pressure on President Barack Obama to cancel the 1,700 pipeline.

524 people have now been arrested protesting the Keystone XL.


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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby 2012 Countdown » Tue Aug 30, 2011 4:52 pm

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Daryl Hannah has taken part in numerous environmental demonstrations – she was also arrested in 2009 at a protest in West Virginia. Photograph: Jose Jacome/EPA
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Image

Aug 30, 3:07 PM EDT
Daryl Hannah arrested in White House oil protest

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Actress Daryl Hannah has been arrested in front of the White House along with other environmental protesters who oppose a planned oil pipeline from Canada to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

The sit-in Tuesday involved dozens protesting the Keystone XL pipeline. It would go through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas to refineries in Houston and Port Arthur, Texas.

Before she was arrested, Hannah told The Associated Press the protesters want to be free from dependence on fossil fuels. The group calls for clean energy investments instead. Hannah says they hope President Barack Obama will not bow to oil lobbyists.

Hannah sat down on the sidewalk near the White House and refused orders from U.S. Park Police to move.

She has been arrested in the past for environmental causes.

---
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby operator kos » Tue Aug 30, 2011 9:25 pm

So glad these protests are happening. If this tar sands pipeline goes through, it's pretty much game over on both the environmental and energy fronts.
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Oct 05, 2011 8:02 pm

American burying beetle becomes player in Keystone pipeline drama
October 5, 2011 | 4:28 pm

Plans for a 1,700-mile-long tar-sands oil pipeline across the Midwest face a variety of political and logistical hurdles. To that, add one more: a large black beetle with red spots whose habitat, it seems, lies right where the Keystone XL pipeline would go.

Out of 23 endangered species that range on or near the pipeline route, only the American burying beetle would be adversely affected by the controversial, 36-inch pipeline, a recent environmental review says.

Canadian pipeline company TransCanada has already moved into beetle relocation mode.

Over the summer, a University of Nebraska researcher led a massive effort to find, trap and relocate more than 2,000 of the beetles from the pipeline's proposed route through Nebraska. A 100-mile-long corridor atop the pipeline route was mowed to a nub in the hope of leaving the route unattractive for the beetles to return.

On Wednesday, three environmental groups filed a federal lawsuit in Nebraska, challenging the right of federal agencies to authorize work to help save the beetle from a pipeline that hasn't even been authorized yet.

The U.S. State Department, named in the suit along with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, held hearings in Nebraska and elsewhere along the pipeline route last week on TransCanada Corp.'s application for an international permit to build the pipeline, which would haul bitumen extracted from Alberta tar sands to refineries in Oklahoma and the Texas Gulf Coast.

The decision is not expected until the end of the year, and conservation groups in their lawsuit said it is premature to start moving beetles and mowing prairie grass before the company has permission to build the hotly contested pipeline.

"To be working on the pipeline route when you don't have a permit and you're in a public process really makes a mockery of that public process," Noah Greenwald of the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the plaintiffs, said in an interview with The Times.

The Western Nebraska Resources Council and Friends of the Earth joined in the suit, which alleges that rare native grasses were cut down as part of the beetle project. They want the court to declare the endeavor a violation of the National Environmental Policy Act.

Further, conservationists say the State Department's environmental review should have taken into account not just the beetles, but also migratory birds such as the critically endangered whooping cranes whose path northward from Texas goes several hundred miles along the pipeline route.

Michael George, a field supervisor for the Fish and Wildlife Service in Nebraska, said the federal government issued a permit to University of Nebraska researcher Wyatt Hoback to carry out the beetle relocation and research over the summer.

George said he understood that Hoback was paid separately by TransCanada for mitigation of pipeline impacts on the beetle.

"Our review of what he was doing was that it was all consistent with his permit. Now, the fact that he was funded by Keystone and they were benefiting from some of his work, yeah, there's no doubt about that," George said.

He also said the knowledge gained from Hoback's research is likely to prove invaluable to efforts to preserve the beetle. The mowing of the prairie grass, he said, was carried out under state authority and was intended to prevent carrion from returning to the pipeline right-of-way, and thus discourage the relocated beetles from returning because their food sources would be gone.



TransCanada Pipeline Foes See U.S. Bias in E-Mails
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Published: October 3, 2011

A State Department official provided Fourth of July party invitations, subtle coaching and cheerleading, and inside information about Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton’s meetings to a Washington lobbyist for a Canadian company seeking permission from the department to build a pipeline that would carry crude from the oil sands of Canada to the Gulf of Mexico.

E-mails released Monday in response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the environmental group Friends of the Earth paint a picture of a sometimes warm and collaborative relationship between the lobbyist for the pipeline company, Trans-Canada, and officials in the State Department, the agency responsible for evaluating and approving the billion-dollar project.

The exchanges provide a rare glimpse into how Washington works and the access familiarity can bring. The 200 pages are the second batch of documents and e-mails released so far.

They also offer insight into the company’s strategy, not revealed publicly before. TransCanada lobbyists exchanged e-mails with State Department officials in July about their intention to drop their request to operate the Keystone XL pipeline at higher pressures than normally allowed in the United States to win political support, but then suggested they would reapply for the exception once the project had been cleared.

“You see officials who see it as their business not to be an oversight agency but as a facilitator of TransCanada’s plans,” said Damon Moglen, the director of the climate and energy project for Friends of the Earth. While the e-mails refer to multiple meetings between TransCanada officials and assistant secretaries of state, he said, such access was denied to environmentalists seeking input, who had only one group meeting at that level.

Environmental groups argue that the 1,700-mile pipeline, which could carry 700,000 barrels a day from Alberta to the Gulf Coast of Texas, would result in unacceptably high emissions and disrupt pristine ecosystems.

Wendy Nassmacher, a State Department spokeswoman, disputed that the e-mails showed a pro-pipeline bias. “We are committed to a fair, transparent and thorough process,” she said in an e-mail. “Throughout the process we have been in communication with industry as well as environmental groups, both in the United States and in Canada.”

TransCanada’s chief Washington lobbyist is Paul Elliott, a top official in Mrs. Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign. All of the documents pertain to contacts between Mr. Elliott and government officials.

“What differentiates this case is the potential for conflict of interest. That really raises eyebrows,” said Jake Wiens, an investigator with the Project on Government Oversight in Washington.

Many of the e-mails released Monday are between Mr. Elliott and Marja Verloop, the counselor for energy and environment at the United States Embassy in Ottawa.

On Sept. 10, 2010, in response to an e-mail from Mr. Elliott announcing that Senator Max Baucus of Montana was supporting the pipeline, Ms. Verloop wrote, “Go Paul!”

In an e-mail to David Jacobson, the United States ambassador to Canada, she described TransCanada as “comfortable and on board” with some developments in the review process.

In a fragmented exchange, Ms. Verloop wondered whether TransCanada could reapply to use higher pipeline pressures in the future, to which Mr. Elliott replied, “You are correct.” Such a request after the State Department signed off on the pipeline would require approval only by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, a small federal agency, bypassing broader political scrutiny.

Shawn Howard, a spokesman for TransCanada, said Mr. Elliott lobbied the State Department officials as did lobbyists for many environmental groups. “Mr. Elliott was and is simply doing his job,” Mr. Howard said. “No laws have been broken.”

The State Department is tasked with granting permission, according to the “national interest,” for pipelines that cross national borders and is weighing the environmental impact of Keystone XL against the benefit of expanding the fuel supply for the United States. Its third and final environmental impact statement, released in late August, said the pipeline would have “limited adverse environmental impacts” if operated according to regulations.

The Environmental Protection Agency, which may offer comments on such pipelines but is not empowered to rule on their authorization, sharply criticized the State Department’s previous environmental assessments as inadequate but has not yet weighed in on the August report.

Though the pipeline would help ensure a stable fuel supply from a friendly neighbor, environmental groups oppose it because much of the crude would be extracted from subterranean oil sands in a process that they say results in heavy emissions and destroys the overlying forests. In addition, the pipeline would go through the Ogallala Aquifer, one of the Great Plains’ principal water sources, where a spill could prove disastrous.

While acknowledging that the extraction produces higher emissions than conventional oil drilling, proponents say that environmental groups exaggerate the difference and that new processes are making it cleaner.

The Keystone XL project would create jobs from Montana to Texas. But what scientific and environmental issues should be considered first?

Some of the e-mails have a cozy tone while others reveal a sometimes tense and conflicted relationship. Officials in Washington repeatedly rejected and parried requests for meetings with TransCanada executives even while trying to placate Canada; Keystone XL has the strong support of the Canadian government and would provide a lucrative new outlet for Canadian oil.

This year, for example, State Department officials struggled with how to respond to Mr. Elliott’s request for a second meeting with Jose W. Fernandez, assistant secretary for economic, energy and business affairs.

“I definitely think that Fernandez should NOT meet with TransCanada folks at this point,” one e-mail said. Another said: “It would be unusual for an Assistant Secretary to meet twice with the same company in such a short time, and we wouldn’t be sending a message that we’re unwilling to meet since others of us will be meeting with them.”

Environmental groups have long argued that Mr. Elliott’s lobbying of the State Department is a conflict of interest since he served as Mrs. Clinton’s deputy national campaign director and chief of delegate selection in 2008.

The department has said the decision about whether to permit the pipeline “is not and will not be influenced by prior relationships that current government officials have had.”

In the first cache of e-mails, made public in September, State Department officials seem at times to advise TransCanada officials on how to maximize their chances for pipeline approval.

That tone continued on Dec. 14, when Ms. Verloop sent Mr. Elliott a copy of an article raising questions about his conflicts of interest with information about Mrs. Clinton’s trip to Canada for a meeting of North American foreign ministers, noting: “Oversaw S’s trip to Ottawa yesterday for the trilat. KXL not raised, but Doer flew back on the plane with her.“ Gary Doer is Canada’s ambassador to the United States.

Mr. Elliott responded by saying the coverage made him ill.

Ms. Verloop replied: “Sorry for the stomach pains but at the end of the day it’s precisely because you have connections that you’re sought after and hired.” For emphasis, she added a frowning emoticon.

With a judge now checking to make sure the State Department complies with Friends of the Earth’s document requests, Mr. Moglen anticipates more e-mails will be released. A final decision on the pipeline is expected by the end of the year.


Koch company declared 'substantial interest' in Keystone XL pipeline

Document filed with Canada's Energy Board appears to cast doubt on claims by Koch Industries that it has no interest in the controversial pipeline

In recent months Koch Industries Inc., the business conglomerate run by billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch, has repeatedly told a U.S. Congressional committee and the news media that the proposed Keystone XL oil sands pipeline has "nothing to do with any of our businesses."

But the company has told Canadian energy regulators a different story.

In 2009, Flint Hills Resources Canada LP, an Alberta-based subsidiary of Koch Industries, applied for—and won—"intervenor status" in the National Energy Board hearings that led to Canada's 2010 approval of its 327-mile portion of the pipeline. The controversial project would carry heavy crude 1,700 miles from Alberta to the Texas Gulf Coast.

In the form it submitted to the Energy Board, Flint Hills wrote that it "is among Canada's largest crude oil purchasers, shippers and exporters. Consequently, Flint Hills has a direct and substantial interest in the application" for the pipeline under consideration.

To be approved as an intervenor, Flint Hills had to have some degree of "business interest" in Keystone XL, Carole Léger-Kubeczek, a National Energy Board spokeswoman, told InsideClimate News. Intervenors are granted the highest level of access in hearings, with the option to ask questions. The Energy Board approved Canada's segment of the pipeline with little opposition, and Flint Hills did not exercise its right to speak.

InsideClimate News contacted the Flint Hills manager who filed the Canadian document. She referred questions to Koch Industries general counsel Mark Holden, who did not return calls. Neither did Koch spokespeople.

The State Department, which must approve the project because it crosses an international border, has spent three years reviewing the 1,375-mile U.S. leg of the pipeline proposal. Its decision, which is expected by the end of the year, will be the most far-reaching environmental decision of Barack Obama's presidency so far.

The project's supporters say the pipeline is needed because it would deliver a secure supply of oil from a politically stable ally and produce much-needed jobs during the recession. Opponents contend it would increase global warming emissions and raise the threat of oil spills in sensitive areas along the route. They also argue that gasoline prices in the Midwest would increase and that much of the 830,000 barrels of oil the pipeline could send into the United States each day would go to foreign markets.

Currently, Canadian crude can be pumped only as far as the U.S. Midwest, where a crude oil oversupply is keeping regional oil prices low. The Keystone XL would clear that bottleneck, send Canadian oil to the Gulf Coast and open access to world markets, creating a massive business opportunity for tar sands players.

"There's no ability to access world markets, and that's the reason why WTI [Midwest oil pricing] is depressed. Keystone XL will relieve that issue," said Chad Friess, an oil and gas analyst at UBS Securities Canada Inc. in Calgary, Alberta. "Pricing is expected to improve as it comes on stream."

A 2009 market analysis conducted for TransCanada, the Alberta-based company that hopes to build the pipeline, projected that it would create a $3 per-barrel increase, at minimum, for Canadian heavy crude in the Midwest. Canada's petroleum producers would benefit most from the price hike. The report predicts their annual revenues would increase $2 billion to $3.9 billion in 2013. But the entire industry—including the refineries and shipping businesses where Koch Industries has concentrated its efforts—would also profit.

"Keystone XL is about the whole industry," said Danielle Droitsch, senior adviser to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), a nonprofit environmental organization that opposes the pipeline. "They will fetch a higher price of oil from the Gulf Coast market, which also happens to be an international market."

Deep Involvement in Oil Sands Trade

The controversy over the Kochs and the pipeline was sparked by an InsideClimate News report from February. That analysis, also published on Reuters.com and later cited by various news organizations, found that Flint Hills is deeply involved in the Canada-Alberta oil sands trade and is well positioned to benefit if more heavy crude is exported to the United States.

The Koch brothers own nearly all of Wichita, Kan.-based Koch Industries, the second-largest private company in the United States. The energy and manufacturing conglomerate earns an estimated $100 billion in annual revenue from its network of subsidiaries—a mix of oil, gas, pipeline, chemical, fertilizer and paper and pulp companies. In addition to its Canadian operation, Koch's Flint Hills subsidiary operates oil refineries in Alaska, Texas and Minnesota as well as a dozen fuel terminals in the Midwest and Texas.

The Koch brothers have donated millions to Republican candidates and conservative movements, bankrolling groups involved in Tea Party causes and in campaigns to deny climate change science and the need for cleaner energy. Through their Flint Hills subsidiary, they underwrote the failed 2010 ballot initiative that would have suspended California's landmark law capping greenhouse gases.

The United States already gets nearly a quarter of its oil, about 2 million barrels every day, from Canada. Half of it comes from Alberta's tar sands patch, where Flint Hills is responsible for shipping close to 25 percent of the oil sands crude being piped into the United States.

At the other end of the proposed Keystone XL supply chain, in the Texas refining corridor, Koch Industries has been upgrading its Corpus Christi refinery to be able to handle harder-to-process blends of tar sands, according to industry reports.

A String of Denials from Koch Industries

Koch Industries did not reply to questions about what it meant when it told Canadian regulators it had a "direct and substantial interest" in the Keystone XL. But after InsideClimate News reported on Feb. 10 that Koch Industries was well positioned to benefit from the pipeline, its representatives complained of media bias and denied to Reuters that it had any interest in Keystone XL.

As a result of the InsideClimate News report, Rep. Henry Waxman of California, the ranking Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee's Energy and Power Subcommittee, began looking into the Koch connection to Keystone XL. Koch Industries representatives told Waxman's staff that Flint Hills had no financial interest in the pipeline.

This has "nothing to do with any of our businesses," Koch spokespeople were quoted as telling the congressman's staff members in a May 20 letter that Waxman sent to Reps. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), the Energy and Commerce Committee chair, and Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.), who chairs the Energy and Power Subcommittee.

In that letter, Waxman urged the Republican congressmen to seek documents from Koch Industries that Waxman's own staff had been unable to obtain. At the time, Upton and Whitfield were fast-tracking a bill—which passed the House on July 26 but was ignored by the Senate—that would force the Obama administration to decide on Keystone XL by Nov. 1.

The Energy and Power Subcommittee denied Waxman's request. A subcommittee aide told reporters at the time that the letter was "a transparently political stunt."

The Los Angeles Times has reported that Koch Industries and its employees were the largest single oil and gas donor to members of the Energy and Commerce Committee during the 2010 campaign. That included $20,000 in contributions to Upton, who is leading the charge to block EPA's new rules for greenhouse gas emissions. Upton was once considered a moderate, who had voted for amendments strengthening the Clean Air Act. At one point his website contained a statement, now removed, that "climate change is a serious problem that necessitates serious solutions."

Koch Industries issued a statement after Waxman released his letter to Upton and Whitfield. "As we explained to Representative Waxman's staff ... we have no financial interest in the project," said Phillip Ellender, president and chief operating officer for Koch Companies Public Sector. "Given these facts, we are confused about why Koch is being singled out and inserted into these discussions."

In late May, Ellender responded to a second InsideClimate News story, this one about questions raised by Waxman. Ellender told Reuters in an email that "we have no financial stake in the pipeline" and called the article "factually inaccurate." He did not identify any specific inaccuracies.

In June, Koch Industries asked the Los Angeles Times to correct an op-ed written by Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club. Brune described Keystone XL as being "backed" by the Koch brothers.

"Koch is not involved in the Keystone Pipeline project in any way as we have stated publicly and as has been widely acknowledged," Koch spokesperson Melissa Cohlmi said in a letter requesting the correction, which ran on July 15. "This is not a matter of opinion since there are no facts to the contrary."

Keystone XL to Benefit All Oil Sands Players

Koch Industries, like the rest of the oil industry, is well positioned to benefit from a pipeline that would double U.S. oil sands imports.

The company's Flint Hills subsidiary already has an oil terminal in Hardisty, Alberta, the starting point of the Keystone XL. It sends about 250,000 barrels of diluted bitumen a day to a heavy oil refinery it owns near St. Paul, Minn., making that refinery "among the top processors of Canadian crude in the United States," the company website says.

Flint Hills is not among the six shippers that have already signed contracts to send their oil through the Keystone XL. But Steven Paget, vice president of energy infrastructure at FirstEnergy Capital, an oil and gas brokerage firm based in Calgary, said every oil sands player would benefit from the pipeline, because the price of all Canadian crude would rise.

Most of Alberta's heavy oil is currently shipped to the Chicago area or to Cushing, Okla., the world's largest oil storage facility and the point where prices are set for U.S. crude. Stockpiles at Cushing are depressing crude prices in the country's midsection below the global benchmark and pinching profits across the entire tar sands supply chain.

The price spread on Tuesday was nearly $25, with the global benchmark, known as the Brent crude oil marker, trading at just below $100 and the Cushing price, known as West Texas Intermediate or WTI, settling at a one-year low of about $76. "Once this [Cushing] bottleneck is relieved, the expectation is that WTI will appreciate to something closer to world oil prices," said Friess of UBS.

Paget, the FirstEnergy Capital analyst, said "such a pricing differential will be too attractive to [oil sands] shippers. They will sign up for commitments to ship ... to the Gulf," growing their operations and bottom lines.

Refiners that have upgraded their Gulf Coast plants to handle heavy crude are especially well positioned to take advantage of a new gush of oil.

A 2010 analysis by Accufacts Inc., an energy consulting firm that focuses on pipelines, identified Koch's Corpus Christi plant as one of 22 Gulf Coast refineries—out of more than 50—that is now capable of refining "a significant volume of blended bitumen," the type of crude that would flow through the Keystone XL. The report was prepared for the Natural Resources Defense Council and was based on data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, a division of the Department of Energy.

The Accufacts report predicted that 90 percent of the 500,000 barrels of Keystone XL bitumen expected to eventually reach the Gulf each day would be handled in refineries on the line's route in the Houston and Nederland, Texas areas. It said 10 percent could be handled in Corpus Christi and elsewhere along the Gulf Coast via connecting pipelines.

Refining heavy crudes, which are cheaper to purchase than light varieties, is profitable for refiners, Paget said. "By buying cheaper oil, it reduces their costs. They may have to make more capital expenditures. But for the long term, their input costs will be [recovered] later."

Friess said that while producers will benefit most from the pipeline, refineries along the Gulf—which he described as the "most sophisticated refineries in the world"—will profit, too, because they'll be able to outbid other refining markets for Canadian crude.

Droitsch, the NRDC adviser, said the entire industry is banking on an Obama green light by year-end. "The pipeline basically sends an overall signal to industry that they can continue with their expansion plans."
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Oct 20, 2011 11:32 am

Safety steps may head off pipeline

By Paul Hammel

UPDATE: The top officer of the Nebraska Legislature is now saying that because of the legal risks, state lawmakers should not hold a special session next month to deal with the controversial Keystone XL pipeline.

State Sen. Mike Flood of Norfolk, the speaker of the Legislature and a lawyer, released a legal analysis Wednesday stating any law that senators could pass this fall to divert the contentious pipeline around Nebraska's groundwater-rich Sand Hills would leave the state vulnerable to an expensive lawsuit.

In particular, Flood said, a proposed bill for the special session, the Oil Pipeline Siting Act, would risk violating the federal Interstate Commerce Clause by requiring a new state regulatory review after a three-year federal analysis is near its end.

The legal analysis is sure to put a damper on efforts to call a special session, which would require the consent of 33 senators or action by Gov. Dave Heineman, who has consistently cited legal concerns in opposing such a session.

A group of senators, led by Ken Haar of Malcolm and Annette Dubas of Fullerton, has been calling for such a session. They want to pass regulations requiring pipeline developer TransCanada Inc. to reroute the project around the Sand Hills in order to avoid risking oil spills that could contaminate local water supplies for livestock and local residents.

Supporters of a special session have said the Legislature passes laws all the time that risk a legal challenge. They say the risk is worth it to ensure that the pipeline doesn't threaten the shallow aquifers of the Sand Hills.

Flood's letter, sent to all state senators, comes on the heels of a proposal Tuesday by TransCanada to adopt seven new safety measures in the Sand Hills to further safeguard against leaks and provide quicker and better emergency response to spills.

Critics of the project lampooned the new measures as “window dressing” that the company had either already agreed to or had bitterly opposed when discussed during the Legislature's spring session.

* * * * *

LINCOLN — New safety measures proposed for the Sand Hills portion of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline might help head off the call for a special session of the Nebraska Legislature this fall on the contentious issue, a key state senator said Tuesday.

"I think it has the potential to satisfy some of my colleagues. For those already satisfied, it adds an extra layer of protection," said State Sen. Chris Langemeier of Schuyler, chairman of the legislative committee that deals with pipelines.

But the seven new measures outlined by pipeline developer TransCanada Inc. were lampooned by critics of the project as "window dressing" that the company bitterly fought during the Legislature's spring session.

Malcolm Sen. Ken Haar, a leading advocate for a special session to reroute the pipeline, said he'll continue to press for that session.

"If they're going to do all of this stuff, why not just move the pipeline route?" Haar asked.

TransCanada offered the new safety steps Tuesday in response to concerns raised last week by four state senators.

It was the latest development in a long-running controversy over the 36-inch-wide pipeline, which would cross Nebraska's groundwater-rich Sand Hills and, critics say, threaten water supplies for livestock and residents across the region.

In Tuesday's letter, the company repeated its position that at this late stage, it is impossible to reroute the $7 billion pipeline around the Sand Hills. Oil refinery customers on the U.S. Gulf Coast, the company has said, cannot wait for a new route to be designed and reviewed.

"I believe they should help alleviate any remaining concerns about the safety of the approved route of the pipeline," wrote Alex Pourbaix, president of energy and oil pipelines for TransCanada, of the proposals in concluding the three-page letter.

Langemeier, who attended last week's meeting, said that session was worth it.

"No other state got TransCanada to offer a $100 million bond," he said, including those that have laws concerning pipeline routes.

Pipeline opponents said that most of the safety measures have already been offered and that most would not prevent a leak.

The $100 million bond for cleaning up a Sand Hills spill would be inadequate, they said, when compared with the projected $700 million cost of cleaning up a crude-oil pipeline leak that spilled 800,000 gallons of oil into Michigan's Kalamazoo River just 15 months ago.

"You can plant flower seeds in a pile of manure, but it's still a pile of manure," said Jane Kleeb of the environmental advocacy group BOLD Nebraska.

Kleeb said TransCanada should have adopted the new safety measures from the beginning.

Ken Winston of the Sierra Club, Nebraska chapter, said the proposals were "feel-good" steps to make the special session "go away."

"They're basically acknowledging that there's an issue here," Winston said. "The better way to resolve it — instead of saying they can play God and engineer around it — is to avoid this area altogether."

Shawn Howard, a TransCanada spokesman, said the proposals came after a thorough review by pipeline safety experts about the concerns raised last week. They included faster response times to leaks and greater safeguards against oil reaching groundwater.

"We wouldn't agree to something that wouldn't work or wouldn't be meaningful," Howard said. "This is a very thoughtful response."

The company has previously said it would encase the pipeline in concrete in areas of high groundwater. This letter specified that the extra layer would extend for 35 miles.

Spill response drills were already planned, but Howard said the company wants special training for the Sand Hills.

Providing a concrete barrier around the pumping station and moving response crews closer to the Sand Hills were new ideas.

TransCanada did an about-face on posting a cleanup bond. It opposed similar proposals during the spring legislative session.

"I can't speak to that," Howard said of the change of heart. "But this is where we're at today. I think it shows our willingness to listen and go even further above and beyond what we've already been willing to do."

The company, he pointed out, has already agreed to 57 additional safety steps with federal regulators.

Gov. Dave Heineman, who has advocated for a change in the pipeline route around the Sand Hills, did not respond to requests for a comment about TransCanada's new proposals.

He held an unannounced meeting Tuesday with two U.S. State Department officials. Heineman has expressed frustration that he has not received clear answers from federal officials about Nebraska's authority to regulate crude-oil pipelines.

The governor has expressed doubts that the state could change the pipeline route via legislation this late in the process without risking an expensive legal battle.

Haar is among a group of state senators who argue otherwise. They contend that Nebraska's power is clear and that the Legislature must act this fall, before the State Department rules on a federal permit for the project. That ruling is expected before the end of the year.

Langemeier, who was among a group of state senators who met with State Department officials Monday, said the state should have passed a pipeline routing law years ago if it wanted to have an impact.

"I don't think a special session done today will affect the route of this pipeline, unless you want to do something to start a lawsuit and delay the process," Langemeier said. "And I don't have an interest in that. It's a lawsuit I don't think we have any potential to win."
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Nov 10, 2011 3:37 pm

Keystone Stalled

The Obama administration reportedly plans to announce it will delay final approval for the Keystone pipeline and explore a new route for it. Huge, if true; stay tuned.


Exclusive: U.S. to seek new Keystone route, delaying approval
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby Jeff » Tue Nov 15, 2011 4:33 pm

I'm more the permanent halt type, but it's something, I guess.

Bound for U.S., NDP critics vow to tell ‘whole story’ on Alberta oil

Gloria Galloway
OTTAWA— Globe and Mail Update
Posted on Tuesday, November 15, 2011 8:06AM EST

The New Democrats are sending two of their critics to Washington to tell U.S. legislators that some Canadians are concerned about the environmental impacts of oil-sands development.

At a time when the Conservative government and TransCanada Corp. are attempting to salvage a plan to run the Keystone pipeline from Alberta to the Gulf Coast to carry oil-sands crude for processing, Megan Leslie and Claude Gravelle are heading to the U.S. capital to let American politicians know that feelings are mixed on this side of the border. The New Democrats do not want to put a permanent halt to oil-sands development but say the federal government and Alberta should take a timeout to determine how the oil can be extracted with the smallest amount of damage to the environment and to develop a plan to deal with climate change.

Ms. Leslie, the NDP environment critic, and Mr. Gravelle, the party’s natural resources critic, leave Tuesday and return Wednesday night.

“I am meeting with senators and congressmen. I am meeting with legislators who have an interest in hearing a different side of the story on Keystone, who have an interest in talking to Canadian legislators who represent a different point of view,” Ms. Leslie said.

“The Prime Minister has been down there and he’s sent lobbyists down there and he’s sent other elected officials down there. But I don’t think that’s necessarily the whole story when that comes to what Canadians are thinking.”

Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver has been to Washington a couple of times to argue that the pipeline presents no real environmental risk. He has also travelled to Europe to protest the EU decision to label Canadian oil as dirty.

...


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... le2236613/

Globe readers' comments are as thoughtful and persuasive as ever.

How typically un-Canadian of the NDP. These "people" should be ashamed and tried for treason.

The socialists are effectively dissing the Canadian economy over questionable stats. Their seditious attitudes are being used solely to promote their extreme leftwing agenda. These marxists must be put in their place. They are national embarrassment.

Why does the NDP want the US to buy more oil from terrorists. Do they have a hidden agenda to support Islamic terrorism?
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby Jeff » Tue Nov 15, 2011 7:28 pm

The Oil Empire Strikes Back:

Oliver says NDP should not bad-mouth Keystone XL to Americans

November 15, 2011. 6:40 pm

OTTAWA — A senior minister in the Harper government has accused the opposition NDP of “denigrating” and “undermining” Canada by sending two of its MPs to Washington to voice concerns about the controversial Keystone XL pipeline.

The message came Tuesday from Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver, who blasted the New Democrats in the House of Commons and then left the chamber to repeat his criticism to reporters.

...

Oliver said he was “appalled” when he heard the NDP was travelling to the U.S. to “talk negatively” about the pipeline.

“This is a project which will generate hundreds of thousands of jobs for Canadians, billions of dollars in economic activity, fund important social services like education for our children, health care for the elderly,” said Oliver.

“Frankly, I think what they are doing is a disgrace.”

The minister said that the NDP should confine its criticism of the project within Canada and not go abroad to deliver its political message.

Leslie, who was in transit when Oliver delivered his broadside, later responded in an interview from Washington.

“Elected officials do have the right to talk to people,” she said, adding that Prime Minister Stephen Harper has only presented “one point of view” as he lobbied in the U.S. for the pipeline.

“I think it’s perfectly legitimate for an elected official to come down and say ‘You know what? Stephen Harper is our prime minister but he is not the only person who gets to speak for Canada and there are different points of view in Canada.’

The New Democrats say they want to “open a dialogue” with the Americans on energy, remind them that there’s more to the pipeline issue than just job-creation, and stress the importance of the potential environmental impact of the project proposed by TransCanada Corp.

“We should we be clear with our American partners that it isn’t a no-brainer, as Stephen Harper put it, to many Canadians,” said Leslie. “And they should have their eyes open when they are making decisions. That there are dissenting views, that there is debate around the issue in Canada.”

...


http://blogs.canada.com/2011/11/15/oliv ... americans/
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby Pele'sDaughter » Thu May 31, 2012 4:32 pm

Here's a great blog by a retired news writer I've known for a few years here in cyberspace.


http://www.wetdawgblog.com/


The editor of this blog is Tony Eberts, retired newspaperman who for the last 14 years with a Vancouver daily wrote a column about the outdoors and the environment. A former director of the Wilderness Committee and a lifelong fisherman, I like to talk with dogs and shout at greedy bastards who exploit the world's natural resources and poison the land and water with oil. Unfortunately such people hide behind platoons of politicians, lawyers and media executives.
Murphy, who is a wire fox terrier with a dollop of Jack Russell, is my photo editor and an advisor able to sniff out cat people, Chief Executive Officers and others of questionable character.
Don't believe anything they say.
And at the same time,
Don't believe that they say anything without a reason.
---Immanuel Kant
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby Laodicean » Thu Oct 25, 2012 3:02 am

Image
(Photo: http://tarsandsblockade.org/)

Woman Arrested Blocking Trucks for "Pipeline of Death"

Tar Sands Blockade marks one month of direct action against Keystone XL pipeline
- Common Dreams staff

Putting her body on the line and citing solidarity with the efforts of others trying to block construction of tar sands pipelines in the US and Canada, Cherri Foytlin—wife of a Gulf coast oil worker and mother of six from Louisiana—chained herself to a gate at the Keystone XL pipeline storage yard in Winfield, Texas this morning and refused to move.

For nearly an hour, sitting next to a large banner reading "Defend All Coasts", Foytling blocked six large trucks from leaving the yard. Ultimately, Foytlin's chains were severed by sheriff deputies with bolt cutters and she was immediately placed under arrest.

“This pipeline is a project of death," Foytlin declared. "From destructive tar sands development that destroy indigenous sovereignty and health at the route’s start to the toxic emissions that will lay further burden on environmental justice communities along the Gulf of Mexico, this pipeline not only disproportionately affects indigenous frontline communities but its clear that it will bring death and disease to all in its path.”

Foytlin's personal action coincides with the Defend Our Coast activities in British Columbia this week, where more than 60 Canadian communities are protesting a proposed tar sands pipeline through their region. Her arrest also comes as members of the Tar Sands Blockade marked one month of sustained actions in the form of a tree-sit protest and ongoing acts of civil disobedience have tried to block construction of Keystone through Winnsboro, Texas.


More @ http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/10/24-9
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Re: Tar Sands Action: Over 160 Arrested in ongoing D.C. Prot

Postby elfismiles » Thu Nov 01, 2012 8:36 am

Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein arrested in Texas
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Published: 31 October, 2012, 22:00
Edited: 01 November, 2012, 03:13

Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein. (AFP Photo / Scott Olson)
(36.9Mb) embed video

Jill Stein, a presidential candidate from the Green Party, has been arrested in Texas while attempting to resupply protesters camping out in trees to oppose the Keystone XL pipeline, according to anti-pipeline activists.

The Tar Sands Blockade activists said she was released soon after being taken to the Wood County jail in Quitman, TX.

“Dr. Jill Stein has been released from Wood County Jail on a Class B Misdemeanor Criminal Trespass charge,” the group’s website stated.

Tar Sands has been protesting against the costruction of the Keystone XL pipeline for the last month. However, a spokesperson for TransCanada, the company in charge of the pipeline project, confirmed they are preparing to build around the existing blockade.

Jill Stein and two other women came to resupply the tree-sitters in Winnsboro, Texas. Stein and a freelance journalist were subsequently detained by TransCanada security, and handed over to the police.
“Jill Stein has been released from jail,” says Tar Sands Blockade say in their Twitter (Image from twitter user@KXLBlockade)
“Jill Stein has been released from jail,” says Tar Sands Blockade say in their Twitter (Image from twitter user@KXLBlockade)

On her website, www.jillstein.org, the third-party candidate explains she went to the blockade to adress a very important national issue: climate change.

“Everyone needs to step up resistance to climate-killing emissions. Romney and Obama are only talking about the symptoms of climate change in terms of destruction caused by Hurricane Sandy; the blockaders are addressing the cause.”

The Green Party's media coordinator, Scott McLarty, explained to RT that Jill Stein was focusing on the issue as both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney have ignored climate change during the presidential debates that took place earlier in October at Hofstra University.

“We find it reckless and irresponsible that both the Democratic and the Republican candidates for president never once mentioned climate change at all during this debates.”

Earlier this month, police arrested Dr Stein and her running mate, Cheri Honkala, after they tried to enter the site of the second presidential debate at Hofstra University.

The two were protesting against the exclusion of all but the two major political parties from taking part in the debate.

RT has been broadcasting all third-party debates live and will host the third and final debate, which will take place on November 5, from its DC studios. Jill Stein is slated to participate, alongside Gary Johnson.

http://rt.com/usa/news/jill-stein-arrested-texas-694/
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