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Wicker says Keystone Pipeline could put thousands to work By ROGER WICKER United States Senator In
today’s stagnant economy, there is no room for missed
opportunities. Fourteen million Americans are still unemployed, and
they rightfully want to know: “Where are the jobs?” The
plan for a pipeline to transport oil from Canada and the Bakken region
of North Dakota and Montana to domestic refineries could answer that
question right away with thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in
economic investment. Instead, it appears the project has been postponed
for political reasons. The Obama Administration
announced last month that it would not decide on a permit for the
long-awaited Keystone XL pipeline until more alternative routes are
studied and an additional environmental analysis is completed. This
extended review is expected to take until early 2013 – conveniently
after next year’s election, when pressure from environmental groups can
no longer imperil the President’s reelection bid. The
1,700-mile-long project, which would carry 700,000 barrels of oil per
day to Texas refineries, has already undergone two environmental
evaluations and three years of review involving more than a dozen
federal agencies. It had been widely anticipated that the
administration would approve the Keystone pipeline before the end of
the year. Newspapers across the country are
calling the President’s sidestep a “political punt” and an “insult to
[the] jobless.” The delay of a truly “shovel-ready” opportunity amounts
to an outright dismissal of our urgent need to put Americans back to
work now. TransCanada’s $7 billion pipeline would create an estimated
20,000 new jobs immediately and many more in the future. Unlike the
President’s $447 billion new stimulus proposal, no taxpayer dollars
would be required. Trading Partner We
should not let political maneuvering jeopardize potential job creation
or the integrity of America’s relationship with our largest trading
partner. After the State Department deferred the pipeline decision,
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Canada would be
increasing efforts to promote its cost-competitive energy resources to
Asian markets. In other words, the oil will go somewhere, if not to our
refineries. President Obama’s delay of the Keystone project could be
China’s gain. The global demand for energy
resources is not likely to diminish anytime soon. Strengthening trade
with stable and reliable energy partners like Canada can complement and
encourage greater oil production here at home. An overdependence on
resources from volatile regions of the world – such as the Middle East
and Venezuela – is bad for our economy, national security, and the
price at the pump. Energy Strategy Last
week, I co-sponsored the North American Energy Security Act, requiring
the State Department to act swiftly on the Keystone project. The
legislation would affirm a national commitment to increasing energy
investment, safeguard the rights of states along the pipeline route,
and ensure that the permit includes environmental protections. Productive
trade with Canada is only one part of the long-term strategy we need to
increase American energy independence and create jobs. Much like the
fate of the Keystone pipeline, our domestic energy production has
stalled because the Obama Administration is slow-walking the permitting
process. With unemployment stuck close to 9 percent, we should be
focusing on every opportunity we have to put Americans back to work –
regardless of what is best for the election calendar.
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