Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Keystone approved for use of U.S. land

- MATTHEW BROWN

BILLINGS, Mont. — The Trump administra­tion on Wednesday approved a right of way allowing the Keystone XL oil sands pipeline to be built across U.S. land, federal officials said, pushing the controvers­ial $8 billion project closer to constructi­on.

The approval signed by Interior Secretary David Bernhardt covers 46 miles of the line’s route across land in Montana controlled by the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, said Casey Hammond, assistant secretary of the Interior Department.

The 1,200-mile pipeline would transport up to 35 million gallons of crude oil daily from western Canada to terminals on the Gulf Coast. Project sponsor TC Energy said in a court filing that it wants to begin constructi­on in the next several months, though it’s likely to face more legal challenges.

First proposed in 2008, the pipeline has become emblematic of the struggle between economic developmen­t and curbing the fossil fuel emissions that are causing climate change. The Obama administra­tion

rejected it, but President Donald Trump revived it and has been a strong supporter.

The stretch approved Wednesday includes all federal land crossed by the pipeline, Hammond said. Much of the rest of the route is across private land, which TC Energy has been trying to get permission­s to build on.

Opponents worry that burning the tar sands oil will make climate change worse, and that the pipeline could break and spill oil into waterways like Montana’s Missouri River. They have filed numerous lawsuits.

Hammond said officials in the Interior Department and other agencies have done a thorough review of the line’s potential effects on the environmen­t. He said TC Energy had provided detailed plans to respond to any spill from the line.

“We’re comfortabl­e with the analysis that’s been done,” Hammond said.

In October, another oil pipeline in TC Energy’s Keystone network spilled an estimated 383,000 gallons of oil in eastern North Dakota. The company’s critics say a damaging spill from the Keystone XL pipeline is inevitable given the length of the line and the many rivers and other bodies of water it would cross beneath.

An attorney for environmen­tal groups that have sued to overturn Trump’s permit for the line said they will ask the judge in the case to issue an order blocking the new approval.

“We know President Trump’s permit was unconstitu­tional, and we have every confidence that the federal courts will set aside these approvals,” said Steve Volker, who represents the Indigenous Environmen­tal Network.

U.S. Rep. Greg Gianforte of Montana praised the administra­tion’s move.

“Trump and his administra­tion are delivering on their promise to get this critical infrastruc­ture project moving after years of unnecessar­y delays,” the Republican lawmaker said in a statement.

U.S. District Judge Brian Morris in December denied a request from environmen­talists to block constructi­on because no work was immediatel­y planned. But he also has ruled against the project, including a 2018 decision that stalled the line and prompted Trump to issue a new presidenti­al permit for Keystone XL to cross the U.S.-Canada border.

In Nebraska, the state Supreme Court removed the last major obstacle for the project in August when it ruled in favor of state regulators who had approved a route for the pipeline in 2017. Opponents had argued that regulators didn’t follow all the procedures required by state law.

TC Energy intends next month to begin mobilizing constructi­on machinery in areas designated for worker camps and pipeline storage yards in Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska, according to its court filings. It also plans to start toppling trees along the route in areas of South Dakota.

In April, the company plans to start building a 1.2-mile segment of the pipeline across the U.S.-Canada border. Constructi­on of pumping stations for the line would begin in June.

 ?? (AP) ?? A Keystone pipeline facility is shown in Hardisty, Alberta, in 2015.
(AP) A Keystone pipeline facility is shown in Hardisty, Alberta, in 2015.

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