Canada-US Pipeline Construction To Be Expedited Starting April 1 - Provincial Government

TORONTO (Pakistan Point News / Sputnik - 01st April, 2020) Construction of the Keystone XL pipeline expansion project will be accelerated beginning April 1, the Canadian province of Alberta announced on Tuesday.

"The Government of Alberta has finalized an agreement with Calgary-based TC Energy Corporation to provide financial support to accelerate construction of the [Keystone XL] pipeline starting April 1," the provincial government said in a statement. "The project is expected to be completed and in service in 2023."

As part of the deal with TC Energy - formerly TransCanada - the province will make a $1.07 billion equity investment in 2020 followed by a $4.3 billion loan guarantee in 2021.

The Albertan government said that the project will generate more than 1,400 direct and 5,400 indirect jobs in the province during construction and projects that $21.3 billion in tax and royalty revenues will be injected into the economy following completion.

In January, the Trump administration issued formal approval for construction work to begin on the oil pipeline across Federal land in the US state of Montana, clearing one of the last major hurdles in the approval process.

The Keystone XL expansion project, as well as other energy sector endeavors in Alberta, have faced intense opposition from environmental and indigenous groups, with several projects now hanging in the balance.

The perceived lack of decisiveness from the federal government has created a rift between federal leaders and Alberta Premier Jason Kenney.

The Premier has accused Ottawa of playing into the hands of US-funded special interest groups by delaying projects, that are seen as an economic lifeline for a province that has struggled since the 2014 oil price crash. Alberta's misfortunes have only been exacerbated by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak and the subsequent oil war between Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Keystone is an oil pipeline system that moves Alberta crude oil from the Canadian town of Hardisty to refineries and tank farms in the US states of Illinois, Oklahoma and Texas. The first three phases of the system are currently operational, however, the construction of the fourth phase, better known as Keystone XL, which is planned to transport oil to Nebraska, has caused a major uproar on both sides of the border.

The proposed section of the pipeline, twice rejected by the Obama administration, is planned to originate in Hardisty, pass through Baker, Montana where US-produced oil from the Bakken Formation would be added to it, and eventually terminate in Steele City, Nebraska from where it would be redistributed to other refineries and tank farms.

The pipeline has drawn the ire of environmental, landowner, and indigenous groups in the United States who argue that the pipeline threatens the sensitive ecosystem through which it would traverse and that disasters like an October leak would become commonplace.

TC Energy has said that the $8 billion pipeline would create thousands of jobs on both sides of the border and be a boon to long-term US energy independence. The project also enjoys the support of Trump, who has avidly advocated for expedited implementation of the pipeline.