Not all is well with the argument for the Canada oil pipeline, even  though
for one, I strongly favor it. But one argument against that I  have heard 
recently
has it that the main reason why the pipeline is planned to go to Texas is  
so that
US oil companies can sell refined oil to Europe and ship it from Gulf coast 
 ports.
 
By this reckoning  we would still import most of the oil we are now  
importing
from Saudi Arabia, but Texas oil giants would become much richer.
 
Not sure how true this criticism is, but to the extent that it is,  
something
is very rotten.
 
Billy
 
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Investors Business Daily  
 
 
Sticking Our Head In Tar Sands
Posted 06:28 PM ET  
 

Energy Policy: The administration plans to study rerouting  the Keystone XL 
pipeline until after next year's election, delaying needed jobs  and 
energy. By that time, Canada's oil will be on its way to China. 
That the American people are merely human sacrifices on the altar of  
environmentalism is seen by Thursday's announcement by the State Department 
that  
it has caved in to greenie demands that the Keystone XL pipeline intended 
to  bring Canadian tar sands oil to the American market be rerouted around an 
 aquifer that supplies water to eight states. 
The process will take at least a year, kicking the oil can down the road 
past  the November 2012 election. It is our fear that if President Obama is  
re-elected, the project will be scuttled permanently. That may be a moot 
point  because as we have noted Canada is quite ready to run a pipeline to its 
West  Coast and send its tar sands oil to an energy-hungry China. 
Political considerations weighed heavily in the decision by an 
administration  in which re-election trumps everything else, whether it be 
rising energy 
prices  or the need for jobs. Environmentalists had warned the 
administration they might  find other things to do in 2012 if Keystone XL was 
approved. 
"This is not just about LCV (League of Conservation Voters), which spent  
nearly $1 million to help elect Obama in 2008, or any other group that 
engages  in electoral politics in the upcoming election," said Tiernan 
Sittenfeld, 
the  league's senior vice president for government affairs, in a 
not-so-veiled  threat. 
"It's about people out there who care deeply about the environment, how 
much  they volunteer, how many doors they knock on, how much they contribute  
directly," Sittenfeld added. "We have LCV supporters who maxed out in the 
Obama  campaign in 2008 who have told us they are not going to give this time 
around if  the president approves this pipeline." 
Ironically, a number of unions, a major part of the Democratic base, are  
backing the project, including the International Brotherhood of Electrical  
Workers, the International Union of Operating Engineers, the Teamsters, the  
Laborers' International Union, the Building & Construction Trades Department 
 of the AFL-CIO, and the United Association of Plumbers & Pipe Fitters for  
the U.S. and Canada. They want the jobs. 
The Keystone XL pipeline would carry as much as 700,000  barrels of oil a 
day, doubling the capacity of an existing pipeline operated by  TransCanada 
in the upper Midwest. The 36-inch pipeline carrying oil derived from  tar 
sands in Alberta, Canada, to Gulf Coast refineries would create about 20,000  
construction and manufacturing jobs, union jobs, that will increase the 
personal  income of American workers by $6.5  billion.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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