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Thursday, November 10, 2011

Keystone Pipeline Delayed Until After Election Year

The Obama Administration delayed approval for the Keystone XL pipeline extension from Canada to the US Gulf Coast. Yet another move to play it safe and place political strategy ahead of real economic due diligence. The administration decided to play it safe and dismiss any decisions on moving forward until 2013, one year beyond the 2012 presidential elections.

The current Keystone pipeline starts in Hardisty Canada and extends down the US mid-west belt to St.Louis. The proposed Keystone XL pipeline project will push westward, passing through the borders of Nebraska's Ogallala aquifer to reach the southern tip of Houston Texas and Port Arthur Louisiana. The estimated $7 billion project has been in talks for decades, and the US government was supposed to follow a schedule of 12-18 months of logistic, economic, and environmental studies.

Instead, the delay will decrease optimism among US shippers and refiners, Canadian oil sands producers, and job hunters from both sides of the border. Gulf Coast refineries need certainty about their supplies; delaying their scheduled deliveries one year out (along with the time needed to build), is enough reason to forget the idea of getting oil sand crude altogether.

Aside from the fact that the US clearly does not have an energy plan, it's also puzzling as to why the government allocates so much time for review and political strategy, but does nothing in preparation for new projects. It would be logical for the US to beef up safety precautions such as engineering barriers and enhanced filtration to make way for a project that is sure to develop some ROI for the neighboring states. Issuing a municipal bond to bring the infrastructure project into fruition, while paying back those bondholders with revenue generated by industry productivity is a solution that makes sense. We need a collaborative approach to work around constraints to maximize capital, labor, and productivity resulting from the pipeline project. Canada deals with the production, the neighboring states deal with optimizing economic gain from the pathway, and Houston and Port Arthur deals with the inflow of oil sand crude and delivery to the nation.

Another year of bickering does nothing when no one is willing to get serious. Canada must be laughing in a field of oil sands right about now. We can't blame them.

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