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Controversial Oil Pipeline Plan to Be Rerouted After Threat of Delayed U.S. Approval
Fox News ^ | 11/14/11 | Fox News

Posted on 11/14/2011 4:31:24 PM PST by Ron C.

Edited on 11/14/2011 4:36:08 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]

LINCOLN, Neb. – Days after the Obama administration threatened to delay approval of a planned oil pipeline from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico -- angering unions while appeasing environmentalists -- the company seeking to build the pipeline says it's willing to reroute the project to get it back on track.

TransCanada said Monday evening it will move the planned pipeline out of the environmentally sensitive Sandhills area of Nebraska, and is confident the project will still win approval.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: canada; deadnimby; defaultnimbys; economy; effeminatenimbys; energy; environmental; goodnimby; nebraska; oil; pipeline; politics; transcanada
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To: Ron C.
This "news" while not unexpected given the muzzie in the white hut, it STILL gives me a case of the RED A$$! I also note with an ongoing and uneasy sense of foreboding the choice of headline by FoxNews. What could POSSIBLY be "controversial" about ANOTHER pipeline routed through the apparent wasteland that is western Nebraska??? More and more lately it seems FoxNews is consistently parroting libtard talking points.

It does however raise an interesting point; that is, I assume envirotard issues trump union support. Or maybe pipeliners are the red-headed stepchildren of unions. Of course envirotard faux heartburn can be selectively applied to just about ANY capitalist endeavor. Thereby being an ace in the hole when nothing else can put roadblocks in front of the free market system. A$$HOLES!!!

41 posted on 11/14/2011 8:16:49 PM PST by ForGod'sSake (You have only two choices: SUBMIT or RESIST with everything you've got!!!)
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To: Former Proud Canadian

“...that’s the way the President of the United States wants it. Can anyone make any sense of this?”

Yes, the evil POS POTUS is anti-American...he wants America to go down the tubes...get rid of this evil POS...


42 posted on 11/14/2011 8:26:00 PM PST by GGpaX4DumpedTea (I am a tea party descendant - steeped in the Constitutional legacy handed down by the Founders)
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To: Ron C.

I was talking about sending the crude to China.


43 posted on 11/14/2011 9:11:30 PM PST by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: Qout

Excellent...cui bono? The only question worth asking in politics.


44 posted on 11/14/2011 9:11:36 PM PST by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: ROCKLOBSTER
Why not build the pipeline from Canada to TX through oil friendly states instead of just defaulting to China?

Nebraska is not the culprit here. The state already has over 20,000 miles of pipelines. It's the federal government that's the problem.

Moreover, the XL pipeline is Phase 4 of a 4-phase project. The XL line is being built to a junction with two other Keystone pipelines at Steele City, NE. From there, the oil will move to the Wood River, IL refinery complex (across the river from St. Louis) over a line that was completed a year ago. And it will also move south to Cushing, OK -- the major pipeline junction point in the USA -- from whence it can be sent on to the Texas Gulf Coast...or diverted just about anywhere else in the country.

In other words, Keystone doesn't have the option of re-routing the whole thing. They've already built a system to accept the oil -- and to use it, they've got to get to Steele City, NE.

45 posted on 11/14/2011 9:34:43 PM PST by okie01 (THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA: Ignorance On Parade)
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To: JimmyMc

Sandhill and Nebraska.

No, there actually are sandhills in Nebraska, but it is the Ogalalla aqafer that is the argument in this case, but there already are some twentythree tousand miles of pipelines crossing Nebraska, oil and gas, and this one would only add a couple of hundred more, and it would be state of the art with safety eqipment , this is madness, the primeminister of Canada said this pipeline is a no brainer, so he must have been talking about Obama lol


46 posted on 11/14/2011 11:30:21 PM PST by munin (Live free or die)
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To: ken21

[stars very bright. . .but they’re brighter in the rocky mountains, camping out at 10,000 ft.]

I lived in Colorado, off and on, for seven years. Your imagery makes my heart pant for those awesome vistas.


47 posted on 11/15/2011 12:13:33 AM PST by Brad from Tennessee (A politician can't give you anything he hasn't first stolen from you.)
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To: okie01

Exactly, the pipeline isn’t ‘controversial’ because there’s some pristine ecological reason. It’s controversial for purely political/financial reasons. Cui bono?


48 posted on 11/15/2011 4:34:24 AM PST by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: ROCKLOBSTER
There are more forces in play than just whether or not and when the US will allow the pipeline to be built. If the Keystone is delayed, shippers who have committed to use the pipeline will look for alternatives because they want to ship their oil. They are not on Obama's political schedule. If someone develops an alternative route to terminals in Prince Rupert and then to China, that's where the oil will go. Economic forces are not going to wait for Obama.

TransCanada worked on this route for years. All the approvals up to this level have been made. They have purchased most of the land. Pipe is actually in place in warehouses along the route, ready to go. This is truly a "shovel ready" project, except no government money is involved. It would take two years to build the pipeline.

It will now be delayed at least a year, and several years if they have to re-route it. The oil has to flow. It is apparent that it is going to flow west to Asia, not south to the US.

49 posted on 11/15/2011 4:34:28 AM PST by Former Proud Canadian (Obamanomics-We don't need your stinking tar sands oil, or the jobs that go with it.)
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To: Ron C.

Look at the code word - environmentally sensitive - like somehow it is so fragile that it won’t ever recover. Have liberals ever heard of fire, ice, wind, or storms? How did nature get so far without us to protect it?

Haven’t pipelines been a net, net benefit to wildlife? We’ve become inured to the belief that every act mankind takes is fundamentally harmful to the environment.

If a worm encounters a balled up plastic bag how is that different then a chunk of granite? Nature adapts. Extinction is normal. The earth is very, very old. That’s the fundamental science behind it.

The attempt to preserve the world as it is, now that’s unnatural.


50 posted on 11/15/2011 4:40:01 AM PST by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: ROCKLOBSTER

Sorry, my stupid.


51 posted on 11/15/2011 4:43:53 AM PST by JimmyMc
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To: JimmyMc
Thanks to everyone who gave me a lesson tonight. If I had been smart, I should have googled Snanhill before making my ignorant response.
FR is a valuable tool for my continued education and awareness of things going on around me.
52 posted on 11/15/2011 4:52:47 AM PST by JimmyMc
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To: Carry_Okie
With the decades of experience of multiple crude oil and refined product pipelines crossing many different aquifers, I don't see how these sudden made-up concerns are taken seriously.
53 posted on 11/15/2011 5:05:22 AM PST by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: Recon Dad
No where could I find how much this pipeline could handle.

Keystone Pipeline System
http://www.transcanada.com/docs/Key_Projects/keystone.pdf

Commercial Information

The first leg of the Keystone Pipeline from Hardisty, Alta. to Wood River and Patoka, Ill. has capacity of 435,000 barrels per day.

Phase II of the project to Cushing, Okla. increases capacity to 591,000 barrels per day.

Keystone XL will add an additional 500,000 barrels per day in 2013.

When completed, Keystone XL will increase the commercial design of the Keystone Pipeline System from 591,000 barrels per day to approximately 1.1 million barrels per day.

54 posted on 11/15/2011 5:10:48 AM PST by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: ROCKLOBSTER
Montana and Wyoming have existing refineries

And they are already running with domestic oil.

There are four refineries in Montana. Their maximum capacity is 187,600 BPD.

http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/pet_pnp_cap1_dcu_SMT_a.htm

Wyoming has 6 refineries, total capacity 166,100 BPD.

http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/pet_pnp_cap1_dcu_SWY_a.htm,/a>

So how are you going to put an additional 500,000 BPD of petroleum through those refineries? Who are you going to sell it to? How much expansions will you need of the refined product pipelines? (hint, you will need to grow them also about 500,000 BPD)

The refineries on the Gulf Coast have capacity but many are running on imported oil from overseas. We can replace that with petroleum from North America with the cost of building new refineries.

55 posted on 11/15/2011 5:19:04 AM PST by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney
With the decades of experience of multiple crude oil and refined product pipelines crossing many different aquifers, I don't see how these sudden made-up concerns are taken seriously.

Remember this? The reason that pipeline blew was 1960s haste coupled with 21st Century management cheating on maintenance and inspection costs. It happens.

Having built large processing equipment and installed it in multiple factories, I have a healthy respect for Murphy but even more for management cutting corners. That said, the reason I asked is that I take the prospect of terrorism against pipelines seriously and so should you.

Unlike ANY of your peers, I've taken on a project reversing over two hundred years of mismanagement in a grassland with a sandy soil (220 years, and three months to be precise :-). It took me twenty years to get as far as we have (an unprecedented restoration) and I'm still not done. We perturbed it with nitrogen this year to activate the weed seed bank to see if it had been purged and we're still not there. When you damage a native system, it is particularly susceptible to expensive long term weed problems. When chemistries in the ppb range can screw up a biological process, and having respect for the decay rate it would take to remove a heavy-bodied blob by erosive and photochemical processes, how far surfactants might go in sand, and how dependent this nation is on its largest aquifer, one screw-up or an act of terrorism can take a long time and be very expensive to fix on an actuarial basis. An attack against a pipeline would not be small. one has to ask about the cost of the consequences and reach a rational means of mitigating that set of risks.

No plan is without risk. It is when one assesses competing risks that the optimal choice becomes clear. The job is obviously to reach a cost-effective minimum. The problem in any business is that when the risk is "somebody else's fault" an "Act of God" or whatever, that risk gets discounted and you know it. I am not a fan of socializing risks because SOMEBODY HAS TO PAY FOR THEM, so expecting Uncle Sugar to pony up if there is a problem is a non-starter with me.

Assess all the risks, compare the costs, and make a decision. I'm not arguing against the pipeline, I'm asking about an optimal choice, all risks taken properly under consideration, including terrorism. There's a war on you know.

56 posted on 11/15/2011 7:12:31 AM PST by Carry_Okie (Grovelnator Schwarzenkaiser: Fashionable fascism one charade at a time.)
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To: Carry_Okie
Remember this?

I'm not claiming that pipelines never have a failure. They have, and multiple times.

But they have a better history than any of the other methods of transportation comparing volumes/distance transported versus spill.

And we have had spills, and the aquifers have not be trashed.

57 posted on 11/15/2011 7:30:23 AM PST by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney
I was referring to the article in Fuel Fix which stated that Enterprise of Houston and Enbridge could move the oil thru their pipeline. The article stated that Enbridge’s line runs from Alberta to Chicago and on to Cushing, OK. Enterprise is talking about adding a line called Wrangler to move the oil from Cushing to Houston.

I was just wondering if this line had to capacity to handle an additional 500 to 900 bbl/d.

58 posted on 11/15/2011 7:36:19 AM PST by Recon Dad ("The most important rule in a gunfight is: Always win and cheat if necessary.")
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To: thackney
But they have a better history than any of the other methods of transportation comparing volumes/distance transported versus spill.

Of this I have no doubt.

And we have had spills, and the aquifers have not be trashed.

Good. All I am asking is for a full assessment without socialized costs.

Look at it this way: An agent of the American taxpayer, the FAA, told the airlines that it was just dandy to install cheesy cockpit doors on airplanes so that they could install an extra first class seat. That meant that the taxpayer owned the risk of terrorists blowing through said doors. Three thousand dead in New York would argue that it was a bad deal, a deal made because the taxpayer owned the risk.

It is not until all risks are accounted, internalized, and weighed objectively that a transaction can truly be optimized. So, if the insurers of the pipeline company were fully accountable for all costs associated with the risks of ownership, including the risk of terrorism and the cost of restoration, then I would have no problem with any of it. I just have little confidence that this is actually the case.

59 posted on 11/15/2011 7:55:17 AM PST by Carry_Okie (Grovelnator Schwarzenkaiser: Fashionable fascism one charade at a time.)
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To: Recon Dad
I was just wondering if this line had to capacity to handle an additional 500 to 900 bbl/d.

All existing lines from the Canada and Bakken area are running at capacity. Multiple lines are being planned to add capacity but there exists a significant bottleneck today. Oil is being shipped by rail to move more product but that is more expensive.

North Dakota Pipeline Authority
Annual Report
July 1, 2010 – June 30, 2011
https://www.dmr.nd.gov/pipeline/assets/pdf/08262011/NDPA%20Annual%20Report%2010-11.pdf

60 posted on 11/15/2011 8:27:38 AM PST by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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