Posted on 01/19/2015 5:02:28 AM PST by thackney
Despite an oversupply of crude oil that has halved trading prices and led the U.S. to consider lifting a 40-year-ban on crude exports, completing the northern leg of the Keystone XL pipeline remains a priority, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn said Friday in Beaumont.
We know that as global demand goes up, prices will go up, Cornyn, R-Texas, said. I think we ought to take advantage of the opportunity weve been given because great innovative drilling techniques devised in the United States and the great natural resources we have help grow our economy and help keep America safe.
Cornyn delivered his remarks at a news conference Friday in Beaumont.
With a Republican majority in both chambers, Congress seeks to circumvent President Barack Obamas administration, which has waited several years to decide whether to grant a permit allowing the Canadian company TransCanada permission to build the controversial pipeline across the border.
Crude has long coursed from Canada to Oklahoma through the existing Keystone pipeline. Southeast Texas connected to that line in January last year when the Keystone XL southern leg ending in Nederland was complete, and local plants are already refining crude from Canadian fields.
The northern leg is designed to run near North Dakotas Bakken field, where hydraulic fracturing techniques have unlocked previously unreachable crude oil that refiners want to access at cheaper prices than the cost to ship it by rail. Bakken crude would supplement tar sands in the pipeline, a TransCanada executive said. Because it crosses the border, it needs a State Department permit.
Environmentalists have said Keystone XL would encourage more production of the tar sands, said to have a more negative impact on the atmosphere than lighter grades of crude. Proponents say it would increase the nations energy supply and create jobs en route to boosting the economy.
Ahead of next weeks Senate debate, Cornyn joined local elected officials, refinery representatives and business leaders at a gathering of people upbeat about the Keystone XL pipelines southern leg, which has been on line for one year.
Attendees discussed the pipelines importance and benefits during a gathering at Gulf Coast Fabricators, a Beaumont company that, having earned contracts to help area refineries expand, was billed as a symbol of job creation through Keystone.
Many of Southeast Texas benefits from Keystone have already materialized, as refineries simultaneously expanded and adjusted systems to take in heavier crude from Canada.
Greg Gentry, a Valero vice president over the companys Port Arthur refinery, said his plant takes 15 percent of the volume from the pipelines southern leg, with half being from Canada and the other half from Texas.
Corey Goulet, chief of Keystone projects for the Canadian company TransCanada, said the northern leg would expand volume by 830,000 barrels per day.
Although Gulf Coast refineries continue to operate at capacity, plants like Valero may opt to replace another crude type with more oil sands, and they would receive the Canadian crude with cheaper transportation costs, Gentry said.
Cornyn and other officials hammered the message that Canadian oil would help reduce American reliance on foreign oil, which is subject to geopolitical turmoil.
Overall, supply is becoming less of an issue.Domestic production of energy sources has soared over the past several years, growing global production at a faster rate than demand.
Amid the crude price slump, domestic producers are cutting projects and jobs as international producers run by governments refuse to shrink production. Domestic reserves have led oil producers to call on the U.S. to lift its export ban.
Ha...the Canadian heavy crude is already flowing to US refineries.....
from another thread today:
Oil trains carrying millions of gallons of toxic, explosive crude oil threaten the 25 million Americans who live in the blast zone. DOT should listen their own safety experts and quickly finalize strong new standards that take DOT-111s off the tracks, slow these trains down, prepare first responders and protect families.
the real reason is this: The northern leg is designed to run near North Dakotas Bakken field, where hydraulic fracturing techniques have unlocked previously unreachable crude oil that refiners want to access at cheaper prices than the cost to ship it by rail.
So the greenies have their knickers in a twist....
Best hope at this point, is the tough task to find enough honorable dims in house to override the punk's veto.
And more is coming, with or without the Keystone XL pipeline.
Rail shipments of crude oil continue to increase in B.C.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Rail+shipments+crude+continue+increase/10733394/story.html
Canada Doesnt Need Keystone XL to Win U.S. Crude Supply Battle
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2015-01-08/canada-wins-u-s-crude-supply-battle-without-keystone-xl.html
Exports by rail have more than tripled to a record 182,000 barrels a day in the third quarter, from about 57,000 barrels a day two years earlier, according to Canadas National Energy Board....
Due to investments already committed, oil-sands production is poised to rise 36 percent to at least 2.6 million barrels a day by 2017, Peters & Co., a Calgary-based investment bank, said in a November forecast.
Projects now under construction will require 1 million barrels a day of new pipeline space, said Chris Cox, an analyst at Raymond James Ltd. in Calgary.
What you should expect this year is that all incremental heavy oil barrels are effectively going to be transported by rail, Cox said....
Oil trains carrying millions of gallons of toxic, explosive crude oil ...Must be a new kind of crude.
I thought the same. These faux reporters need to be held accountable. I dislike libs and their MSM and that is as mild as I can write it.
It might be time to bankrupt the environmental lobby. We need to find friendly justices in the courts and start suing the environmentalists for everything. Lawsuit after lawsuit, regardless of its merit. Force them to spend money. Force them to spend resources. In the process start arresting them for environmental sabotage.
Also, we need to start treating leftwing environmental scientists like the idiots they are. Exposé them as hacks and morons, under monetary control of the left. Go after everyone of their grants, to a point of creating a committee whose only function is evaluating grants every year.
Reagan bankrupted the Soviets by forcing them to spend money the didnt have. Time to start learning from Reagan.
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