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Stand indivisible with those in its path. Say ‘NO’ to the Keystone XL pipeline! Deadline tonight 11:59 pm EST.

"Stop Keystone XL" by chesapeakeclimate. (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Quote by Chase Iron Eyes, lead counsel for the Lakota People’s Law Project and public relations director for Oglala Sioux Tribe President Julian Bear Runne

Mon 11/18: Write a comment. “NO” to the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline. “Yes” to the “No Action Alternative”.

In 2017, President Donald Trump, claiming job creation and increased national security, reversed yet another Obama-era action, and granted TC Energy, (the foreign energy company formerly known as TransCanada), a  presidential permit to build the Keystone XL pipeline. It’s the latest phase of tar sands pipelines that have literally split America in half, from the strip-mined tar sand fields in Canada, all the way to Texas and the largest refinery in the US, now completely owned by the Saudis.

TC Energy is now trying to take land away from Americans by eminent domain, and run their lines through Native American lands without consent. Their pipeline speeding Canada’s toxic sludge to Texas will raise oil prices, befoul our air, water and land and continue to cause environmental disasters. Like earthquakes in California, it’s not a matter of “will they occur?”, but when and where.

Tell them you support the “No Action Alternative”, meaning the Keystone XL Project would not be constructed or operated. (2019 SEIS p.S-12)

Deeper Dive

Serving suggestion: Skim through. Find a section that particulary speaks to you and concentrate your comment on that. Don’t get overwhelmed. Get resistant. Write something – it doesn’t have to be long. Your comment, along with others, will help environmental lawyers show judges that this issue is important to the American people.

Where we are right now,  according to our government: 

Who profits? 

“We need this pipeline to provide jobs” is a GOP myth.

So is the claim that a pipeline will take tar sand off the rails.

(nrdc“The choice between a tar sands pipeline and unregulated crude by rail has always been a false one. Despite what many of Keystone XL’s proponents have claimed, tar sands is not a significant part of the crude by rail boom—it’s difficult and expensive to move thick, heavy tar sands by rail and the companies that first tried to make it work are either struggling or bankrupt. And Keystone XL’s rejection didn’t cause more crude to go on the rails—in fact, according to the Energy Information Administration, the relatively small shipments of Canadian crude by rail to the Gulf Coast have declined since Keystone XL was rejected (by the Obama administration). Even the tar sands industry tacitly admits that rail is not a viable expansion plan – which is why it companies cancelled expansion projects and some even pulled out of the tar sands after Keystone XL’s rejection during the Obama administration rather than shift wholesale to rail.”

Build it and it will leak.

They were a tad optimistic: TC Energy initially estimated that the Keystone Pipeline would leak about 50 barrels every 7–11 years or 11 significant spills (more than 50 barrels of crude oil) over 50 years. They were wrong. Their fourth and latest large spill in 9 years, all of much larger than predicted, has alarmed indigenous peoples, affected residents, and environmental activists, who continue to protest the approved Keystone XL expansion, scheduled to begin construction in 2020.

The spill confirms what we have been warning people about over the last 10 years,” said Jeanne Crumly, who owns a cattle ranch along Keystone XL’s approved path and fears a spill could contaminate her land and harm her cows.

On Oct 31st, 9000 barrels, approximately 383,000 gallons, of crude oil spilled into a North Dakota wetland in the latest leak from the Keystone Pipeline.

It was Keystone’s second big spill in two years. In November of 2017, at least 4,700 barrels spilled in South Dakota. While the pipeline was shut off within 15 minutes of this incident, which reportedly took place away from surface water, Ruth Hopkins, a Lakota writer and activist noted the location was dangerously close to an aquifer on which the Lake Traverse Reservation depends.

Many smaller spills have plagued the pipeline since it opened in 2010 to carry oil from Alberta to Texas, including 400 barrel leaks in North Dakota in 2011 and South Dakota in 2016. These accidents are not rare occurances. Between 2006 and the middle of 2015, there were nearly 3,800 pipeline blowouts or other incidents serious enough to require reporting to the U.S. Transportation Department’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration. And they spilled a cumulative 37.5 million gallons of oil and other hazardous liquids, 23 million gallons of which were never recovered.

Tar sand destroys pipes from the inside out.

The pipeline will run dangerously close to drinking water.

The pipeline would cross 1,073 rivers, lakes and streams, not to mention tens of thousands of wetlands in Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska alone. These wetlands include the Prairie Pothole Region that makes up 10 percent of the waterfowl breeding habitat in the Continental United States. In many cases, it will run within a mile of more than 3,000 wells that provide drinking and irrigation water in those states.

TC Energy moved the pipeline route away from the Sandhills regions for it’s “Mainline Alternative Route” (MAR) in 2014 but it still crosses northern Holt County, where the soil is often sandy and permeable and the water table is high—the same characteristics that make the Sandhills so vulnerable to the impact of an oil spill. In some parts of the new corridor, the groundwater lies so close to the surface that the pipeline would run through the aquifer instead of over it. Hydrogeologist Jim Goeke, a professor emeritus at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, said an oil spill in northern Holt County would contaminate the local groundwater, just as it would in southwestern Holt County. “You still have the same kind of problems, essentially, but you get around the Sandhills, and that was the purpose of the rerouting.

Tar sand spills are particularly hard to clean up… 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency used heavy construction equipment to clean up the 2010 Kalamazoo River oil spill. Credit: EPA
Crude oil from the broken Pegasus pipeline spilled across yards and streets and into a creek in Mayflower.Credit: EPA

…and they can make you sick.

(From 2019 SEIS p. S-40) “Potential Effects of the Proposed Project from Accidental Releases“: The primary impacts related to air quality would have the potential for adverse effects to human health. Human health impacts arise from inhalation of the hydrocarbons (organic molecules made of hydrogen and carbon atoms) that make up crude oil. Health effects from exposure depend on the concentration of the chemical in the air and the duration of exposure.”

The Keystone XL pipeline threatens over 110,000 ranches and farms.

Where water supplies are threatened with pollution, so are ranches and farms. “On top of potential damage to crops, farmers and landowners alike from Texas to Montana have been threatened with land repossession by eminent domain—the law that says a private company can come in and take part of your property if it can prove to the government that doing so will benefit the general public. Julia Crawford, a Texan landowner, says: “As a landowner, property rights are key to my livelihood and family legacy. A foreign corporation pumping foreign oil simply does not qualify as a common carrier under Texas law. TransCanada does not get to write their own rules. I look forward to the Supreme Court hearing our case and our plea to protect the fundamental rights of property owners.”

(From 2019 SEIS p. S-40) “Potential Effects of the Proposed Project from Accidental Releases” – a release could limit or prohibit agricultural production until cleanup is complete and contaminated soils are remediated. In addition, toxicological impacts could include reduced vegetation for grazing. During remediation, contaminated vegetation and soils may require excavation and removal, and vehicles and equipment used to respond to and remediate a spill may increase the potential for soil disturbance (e.g., rutting, compaction and erosion). It is also possible that wind or water erosion could carry contaminated soils off the spill site and adversely affect vegetation used for grazing in areas beyond the spill location.”

The Keystone XL is in the United States, not necessarily for the United States.

The Keystone XL pipeline will transport crude oil from Alberta, Canada to Nebraska. The oil will then flow through another pipeline to Gulf Coast refineries, where it will be refined into petroleum products like gasoline. In 2012, refineries exported about 38% of their products. In 2017, they exported about 66% of their products. Although experts say it’s unlikely that none of the refined products will be sold in the U.S. once the pipeline is built, there are no requirements that it has to be sold here either.

Our country, our people, our environment and our wildlife, are inhabiting what is just a convenient pathway for a foreign oil producer to get its incredibly polluting product to a Saudi-owned refinery and others in the Gulf that now export the majority of their product internationally.

Gas prices will rise.

Weirdly enough, acting as a host for a  pipeline isn’t going to pay off for most Americans. According to an analysis by the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations, “Keystone XL will divert Tar Sands oil now supplying Midwest refineries, so it can be sold at higher prices to the Gulf Coast and export markets. As a result, consumers in the Midwest could be paying 10 to 20 cents more per gallon for gasoline and diesel fuel. These additional costs (estimated to total $2 to $4 billion) will suppress other spending and will therefore cost jobs.”

Greenhouse gases and climate change

Large-scale tar sand processing plant and tailing ponds visible from space, surrounded by deforestation. Courtesy of Global Forest Watch.

The pipeline is invading land that legally belongs to Native Americans.

Conflicts of interest

Back in 2013, it was found that an environmental impact statement thought to be authored by the State Department for the Keystone XL pipeline, was written instead by a private company bribed to write a rose-colored report. According to an analysis of the public documents, “the Environmental Resources Management was paid an undisclosed amount under contract to TransCanada to write the statement.” Within the “official government” document, the analysis estimates, then dismisses, the pipeline’s gigantic carbon footprint and other environmental impacts due to the fact that “the mining and burning of tar sands is unstoppable.”

The pipeline could endanger many animals and their habitats in the U.S. and Canada.

Ok, here’s the cover of the SEIS. It’s unintentionally hilarious that it shows all the things endangered by the project it defends, i.e., clean water, clean land, and…whooping cranes.

Reading/Watching

Originally posted on Indivisible Ventura. Re-posted with permission.


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