Senators Rebuke Clinton Over Controversial Pipeline

Senators Rebuke Clinton Over Controversial Pipeline

For Immediate Release
October 29, 2010
 
Contact:
Kelly Trout, 202-222-0722, [email protected]
Alex Moore, 202-222-0733, [email protected]  

Senators Rebuke Clinton Over Controversial Pipeline

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Eleven influential senators sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton today rebuking her for stating support for a controversial pipeline before her own agency has completed a legally mandated environmental impact analysis.

The letter criticizes remarks Secretary Clinton made October 15 at San Francisco’s Commonwealth Club indicating that she is “inclined” to approve the controversial pipeline.

“Approval of this pipeline will significantly increase our dependence on this oil for decades,” the senators wrote. “We believe the Department of State (DOS) should not pre-judge the outcome of what should be a thorough, transparent analysis of the need for this oil and its impacts on our climate and clean energy goals.”

The eleven senators, led by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), included several members of the Foreign Relations Committee and other committees with jurisdiction over the State Department. Senator Leahy, as chairman of the State Appropriations Subcommittee, controls the State Department’s purse strings.

“We applaud Senator Leahy’s leadership in championing clean energy over more dirty, dangerous oil,” said Alex Moore, dirty fuels campaigner for Friends of the Earth. “The senators raise necessary questions about the thoroughness and transparency of the State Department’s review process.”

Moore added, “Secretary Clinton’s comments were inappropriate and she should heed these senators’ concerns. Secretary Clinton must not fast-track this process: The public has the right to know just how dangerous and unnecessary this pipeline and tar sands oil are.”

“The Keystone XL pipeline is an environmental disaster in the making. It would double our country’s dependence on the dirtiest oil available and exacerbate climate change. The threat of spills in America’s heartland and the additional air and water pollution it would unquestionably cause make this pipeline dangerous for people all along its path,” Moore said.

The letter is the latest in an outpouring of criticism Secretary Clinton has confronted after her remarks regarding the pipeline. Last week, Senators Mike Johanns (R) and Ben Nelson (D) of Nebraska, one of the states in the pipeline’s path, were joined by Senator Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) in urging Secretary Clinton to let her agency complete its legally mandated review of the dangers the pipeline poses before rushing to conclusions about the outcome. The Ogallala Aquifer, a drinking water source for Nebraskans, would be crossed and endangered by the pipeline.

The Keystone XL pipeline would be constructed by Canadian oil and gas giant TransCanada. If approved by the Obama administration, it would bring high-carbon, dirty tar sands oil from Canada through the plains states of the U.S. to Gulf Coast refineries near Houston at a rate of 900,000 barrels per day.

The pipeline has been opposed by environmental, agricultural, and tribal organizations, and more than 50 members of Congress have also voiced strong concerns. More than 48,000 activists joined Friends of the Earth in urging the Obama administration to reject the pipeline during the State Department’s public comment period.

The text of the letter, signed by Senators Leahy, Merkley, Lautenberg (D-N.J.), Dodd (D-Conn.), Shaheen (D-N.H.), Menendez (D-N.J.), Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Burris (D-Ill.), Sanders (I-Vt.), and Cardin (D-Md.), is available below.

More information about the Keystone XL pipeline is available here: /keystone-xl-pipeline

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The Honorable Hillary Clinton
Secretary of State
Department of State
Washington, DC 20520

Dear Madam Secretary,

Thank you for your personal commitment to making progress on climate change.  It is in light of this commitment that we write to you about our concerns with the proposed TransCanada Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.  As you recently stated, tar sands oil is “dirty oil”.  Approval of this pipeline will significantly increase our dependence on this oil for decades.  We believe the Department of State (DOS) should not pre-judge the outcome of what should be a thorough, transparent analysis of the need for this oil and its impacts on our climate and clean energy goals.

As you know, serious concerns have been raised in the comments on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) that your agency recently issued for the pipeline proposal.  These concerns describe, among other things, the significant environmental degradation caused by the extraction of oil from Canadian tar sands, the emissions of greenhouse gases from this extraction, and the risks associated with transporting this oil into and across the United States.  These concerns caused the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to issue the DEIS its lowest possible ranking, and led the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Department of Interior (DOI) to request significant additional analysis.  We write to request your answers to the following questions:

1.   The DEIS fails to estimate the additional greenhouse gases that the pipeline will produce by increasing the production of tar sands oil, which has a significantly higher life-cycle of greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional oil.  EPA states that, “[I]t is reasonable to conclude that extraction will likely increase if the pipeline is constructed.”  

  • Does the Department of State (DOS) agree with EPA, that extraction will likely increase if the pipeline is constructed?  
  • Assuming that production is increased to fill the pipeline, how many tons of greenhouse gas emissions would this produce?  
  • Does DOS plan to ask EPA to provide an estimate for lifecycle emissions for tar sands?

2.   While substantial expansion of tar sands oil production is planned, this presumably depends on producers being able to transport and sell the oil.  The DEIS states that “Producers in Canada have indicated that if the U.S. market is not available to them, much of the crude would be shipped outside of North America, particularly to Japan, China, and India . . .”  

  • What is the current status of the pipeline proposals to the West Coast?
  • What is the capacity of these pipeline proposals relative to the capacity of pipelines to the U.S., with and without Keystone XL?
  • Given that existing U.S. pipeline capacity for tar sands oil will soon be around 2 million barrels a day and Keystone XL would add close to another 1 million in potential pipeline capacity, will Canada have to increase its production to fill these pipelines?  
  • Could Keystone XL open up a market for refined tar sands products through the Gulf Coast?

3.   The DEIS does not address the trans-boundary impacts that would result from the production of oil to fill the pipeline.  

  • Does DOS plan to incorporate the CEQ guidance on trans-boundary impacts and climate change in a revised DEIS?  
  • What is the impact of the production to fill the pipeline and the pipeline itself on migratory birds?

4.  The pipeline would commit the U.S. to a high carbon source of oil for many decades.

  • Is it possible that the wider use of fuel efficient technologies, advanced biofuels, and electric vehicles could offset the need for the pipeline?  
  • What types of disincentives would expansion of tar sands imports into the U.S. pose to achieving reductions in oil use?

5.   Local communities and first responders may not have access to the emergency response plans submitted by TransCanada.  Please provide us with draft copies of the Emergency Response Plan, Facility Response Plans, and Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasure Plans for Keystone XL.  

  • Will DOS require TransCanada to give landowners, first responders, and local government officials the opportunity to review and comment on these plans?
  • Will they be published in a revised DEIS?

6.   Both the Athabasca watershed, downstream from the tar sands oil extraction, and the Ogallala Aquifer, through which the pipeline would extend, are at risk of contamination by tar sands oil production and transportation.

  • Has the DOS considered the potential for adverse impacts to the Ogallala Aquifer along the pipeline route?
  • What design changes will be made to Keystone XL, in light of the fact that the Keystone pipeline has already had two leaks – at the Roswell and Carpenter pump stations.

7.   TransCanada has withdrawn its application for a special permit from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, and DOT is therefore no longer conducting a separate Environmental Assessment of pipeline safety issues.  

  • Will DOS provide additional analysis in a revised DEIS that details pipeline thickness, quality, construction, operating procedures, and potential environmental risks?

 
8.   EPA raised concerns about the impact on communities already experiencing high levels of air and water pollution surrounding the refineries that would refine tar sands oil from the Keystone XL pipeline.  

  • Will DOS evaluate the environmental issues associated with potential impacts to communities near the refineries and other facilities associated with the pipeline?
  •  Will DOS analyze the combined impact of the refineries that would refine tar sands oil and industrial facilities already contributing to exposure in communities?

9.   Please provide us with a time-line for revising the DEIS.  Please also provide us with any additional agency comments that were submitted to DOS.

  • Will DOS publish a revised DEIS with the opportunity for full public comment?  
  • Will DOS conduct and include the additional analysis requested by the EPA, DOE, and DOI and include that analysis in the revised DEIS?  

10. Once DOS has completed a final EIS, it states that it will conduct a National Interest Determination under Executive Order 13337.

  • Will DOS make public its criteria and procedures for making its National Interest Determination?  
  • Will there be an opportunity for public comment on the criteria and procedures in advance of the determination?

Thank you for your assistance in answering these questions.  We believe it is in the national interest to do a careful assessment before reaching a decision about this project.

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Friends of the Earth and our network of grassroots groups in 77 countries fight to create a more healthy, just world. Our current campaigns focus on clean energy and solutions to climate change, keeping toxic and risky technologies out of the food we eat and products we use, and protecting marine ecosystems and the people who live and work near them.

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