The Keystone XL pipeline was proposed in 2008 to move 830,000 barrels of oil a day from the Alberta to the U.S. Gulf Coast where it would supply U.S. refineries that were built to use heavy crudes, rather than the sweet light crudes now coming from shale formations. Those heavy crudes were originally obtained from Venezuela and Mexico–countries whose oil output has dropped in recent years, thereby providing the impetus for Canadian heavy oil to supply these refineries. But approval of the Keystone pipeline has been met with opposition from environmentalists, celebrities and billionaires, resulting in political delays.
An issue that opponents have developed concerning the route for the pipeline is that it crosses the
Ogallala aquifer, which environmentalists indicate could be contaminated if an oil spill should occur. However, Dr. Burt Fisher, a hydrogeologist, indicates that fears of massive risk to water in the aquifer in the case of a potential spill are overblown because the water in the aquifer would prevent any spilled oil from sinking into it. Since oil floats, any spill would be able to be cleaned up quickly.[iii] Moreover, the Ogallala aquifer area has already seen decades of substantial oil and gas exploration without contaminating the aquifer. In fact,
some parts of the Ogallala have seen some of the heaviest drilling in the country.
The southern portion of the Keystone XL has already been built. The reason the 500 mile southern leg from Oklahoma to the Gulf Coast has already been built is because a Presidential permit was not required and because a glut of oil was accumulating in Cushing, Oklahoma. The northern part—extending 875 miles from the U.S.-Canadian border in Montana thru Nebraska—still needs Presidential approval since it crosses the border. From its origin in Alberta to its final destination at the Gulf Coast, the pipeline would transit 1,700 miles with a capacity to carry almost 35 million gallons of oil a day.
In its absence, the oil is being moved by rail. From 2012 to 2013, rail shipments of crude oil in the United States increased
74 percent. And, Canada has announced plans to expand its rail transport capacity for oil by an amount that would more than replace Keystone XL.[iv] But, although rail is safe, its safety record is not as good as that of pipelines where products reach their destination safely more than
99.999 percent of the time.
Further, since TransCanada first applied for a cross border permit, America has laid
10,000 miles of pipeline, over 4,000 miles of which transport oil. America is covered in pipelines with 185,000 miles of onshore and offshore petroleum pipelines and 320,000 miles of natural gas transmission and gathering pipelines that transport resources from production sites to refiners or processing plants and then to market.[v] The natural gas pipeline system totals a vast
2.4 million miles when also considering distribution pipelines that move natural gas to homes and businesses.
The Alternative Pipelines through Canada
There are four pipelines proposed to move oil from Alberta through Canada. Not all of these alternative pipelines, however, will need new construction. Two of the pipelines will move oil east. In March, Canada’s National Energy Board approved a request from Enbridge to reverse the flow of its Line 9 pipeline–a 400-mile pipeline built in 1975 in Ontario and Quebec. Line 9’s flow has been reversed twice before. It currently moves imported crude west from Canada’s east coast. For about $400 million, the pipeline will begin moving about 300,000 barrels per day of Canadian oil to refineries in the east before the end of this year.
Source: Bloomberg Business Week,
The second of the two projects to move Canadian oil east consists mainly of converting a natural gas pipeline to oil. This project (the Energy East pipeline) is proposed by TransCanada, would cost $11 billion, and would move 1.1 million barrels per day from Alberta to refiners in Quebec City and Saint John—a distance of 2,700 miles. If approved, it would be the largest and longest pipeline in North America. TransCanada plans to submit its official application for Energy East next month, is expecting approval by mid-2015, with completion expected by 2017.
Source: Bloomberg Business Week,
The other two projects would ship oil sands west to Asian markets, principally China. Kinder Morgan has proposed the TransMountain expansion project, which would cost around $5.4 billion and move 890,000 barrels per day. Enbridge has proposed the Northern Gateway project, which would cost around $7.9 billion and move 525,000 barrels a day. Northern Gateway was
recommended for approval by a joint review committee late last year after 3 years in the approval process with 209 conditions, including developing a marine mammal protection plan, researching heavy oil cleanup and conducting emergency response exercises. If the project is approved by the Canadian government, construction on the pipeline would start this year and be completed by 2018.[vi] TransMountain is expected to receive a
much faster regulatory review due to legislation the Canadian government passed to shorten the environmental review process,[vii] and because this would be an expansion of an existing pipeline.
Source: Bloomberg Business Week,
Conclusion
Completing the Keystone XL pipeline will create thousands of new jobs (
42,100 direct, indirect, and induced), strengthen our relationship with our Canadian neighbor, allow the United States to become less dependent on the Middle East for oil, and result in less air pollution than using trucks and trains to move oil from the north to the south. Further, this portion of the pipeline will move 100,000 barrels per day of U.S. crude oil from the Bakken, which will significantly help reduce current shipping constraints since
90 percent of Bakken oil is expected to be moved by rail this year.[viii] Polls have shown that
2 out of every 3 Americans support the pipeline. So, why can’t the President decide whether this pipeline, with all these benefits on both sides of the border, is in our “national interest?” What, exactly, does he see as being in our “national interest?”
(i) The Keystone XL Pipeline Gets Some Canadian Competition, May 20, 2014,
Bloomberg Business Week,
[ii] The Keystone XL Pipeline Timeline, April 24, 2014,
Wall Street Journal,
[iii] Debate Continues on Keystone XL pipeline, May 20, 2014,
Nebraska Radio network,
[iv] Saying no to Keystone XL is saying yes to uglier alternatives, April 28, 2014,
The Globe and Mail,
[v] While Democrats Fundraise Off Keystone Delay, Americans Lay 10,000 Miles of Pipeline, April 30, 2014,
Forbes,
[vi] Northern Gateway pipeline recommended for federal approval, with conditions, December 19, 2013,
CBC news,
[vii] Kinder Morgan and Northern Gateway: A Tale of Two Pipeline Reviews, May 14, 2014,
Vancouver Sun,
[viii] Trains and crude oil are too often an accident waiting to happen, May 19, 2014,
LA Times,