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XemaSab

(60,212 posts)
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 05:33 AM Mar 2013

NYT Editorial: When to Say No

The State Department’s latest environmental assessment of the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline makes no recommendation about whether President Obama should approve it. Here is ours. He should say no, and for one overriding reason: A president who has repeatedly identified climate change as one of humanity’s most pressing dangers cannot in good conscience approve a project that — even by the State Department’s most cautious calculations — can only add to the problem.

The 875-mile pipeline avoids the route of an earlier proposal that traversed the ecologically sensitive Sand Hills of Nebraska and threatened an important aquifer. It would carry 830,000 barrels a day of crude oil from the tar sands of Alberta to pipelines in the United States and then onward to refineries on the Gulf Coast. From there, most of the fuel would be sent abroad.

To its credit, the State Department acknowledges that extracting, refining and burning the oil from the tar-laden sands is a dirtier process than it had previously stated, yielding annual greenhouse gas emissions roughly 17 percent higher than the average crude oil used in the United States. But its dry language understates the environmental damage involved: the destruction of the forests that lie atop the sands and are themselves an important storehouse for carbon, and the streams that flow through them. And by focusing on the annual figure, it fails to consider the cumulative year-after-year effect of steadily increasing production from a deposit that is estimated to hold 170 billion barrels of oil that can be recovered with today’s technology and may hold 10 times that amount altogether.

It is these long-term consequences that Mr. Obama should focus on. Mainstream scientists are virtually unanimous in stating that the one sure way to avert the worst consequences of climate change is to decarbonize the world economy by finding cleaner sources of energy while leaving more fossil fuels in the ground. Given its carbon content, tar sands oil should be among the first fossil fuels we decide to leave alone.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/11/opinion/when-to-say-no-to-the-keystone-xl.html?hp&_r=0


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NYT Editorial: When to Say No (Original Post) XemaSab Mar 2013 OP
Cross posted to GD: XemaSab Mar 2013 #1
"Given its carbon content, tar sands oil should be among the first fossil fuels we leave alone" stuntcat Mar 2013 #2
Kick. This is huge. nt wtmusic Mar 2013 #3
I hope this helps pscot Mar 2013 #4
Yes! limpyhobbler Mar 2013 #5

stuntcat

(12,022 posts)
2. "Given its carbon content, tar sands oil should be among the first fossil fuels we leave alone"
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 11:51 AM
Mar 2013

Awww that's so sweet and precious of them to say
It's correct but this is not what will happen. Someone's going to use the hell out of that stuff. ANY fossil fuel humans can get at in the next few decades is going to be burned up.

pscot

(21,024 posts)
4. I hope this helps
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 06:25 PM
Mar 2013

The fact that it's dragged on as long as it has, tells me Obama wants to approve it, but is afraid of the backlash. If he agrees to it, his environmental cred will plummet.

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