Right at at the end of the article: "Obama has not said whether or not he would veto legislation in the event it reaches his desk.
Obama: Keystone XL pipeline does not benefit Americans
Obama: Keystone XL pipeline does not benefit Americans
Republican
leadership in Congress has said authorizing the Keystone XL pipeline
will be its first order of business next year, but President Barack
Obama said the project would be of small benefit to Americans.
RT,
20
December, 2014
During
his year-end press conference, President Obama said building the
Keystone XL pipeline – which would run from the Canadian tar sands
into the United States – would not lead to lower gasoline prices
for Americans.
Additionally,
Obama said it would create a couple of thousand temporary jobs until
construction is completed, but the project would mainly benefit
Canadian oil companies that need to get their oil to the Gulf of
Mexico in order to see it on the world market.
“At
issue in Keystone is not American oil. It is Canadian oil that is
drawn out of the tar sands in Canada,”
said the president. “That
oil currently is being shipped out through rail or trucks, and it
would save Canadian oil companies and the Canadian oil industry an
enormous amount of money if they can simply pipe it all the way
through the United States down to the Gulf.”
He
said the pipeline is "not
even a nominal benefit for US consumer."
Activists march during a protest of
the Keystone XL pipeline in Washington. (AFP Photo/Brendan
Smialowski)
Obama
also said there is still a ways to go on the authorizing the project.
A Nebraska court judge has to determine whether the new path for the
pipeline is appropriate and only then can the State Department have
the information it needs to make its decision.
“I
think there’s a tendency to really hype this thing as some magic
formula to what ails the US economy, but it’s hard to see on paper
where exactly they’re getting the information from,” said
the president.
One
of the president’s main concerns is whether the project will
“significantly
exacerbate”
carbon-dioxide emissions.
Incoming
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, (R-Ky.) reaffirmed plans to
make approving the Keystone XL pipeline, which would run from Canada
to Texas, the first order of business in Congress’ new session.
The
US Senate failed to fast-track the Keystone XL pipeline project in
its closing session this year, falling one vote short of breaking a
filibuster. Next year, however, Republicans will control both
chambers of Congress, making its passage more likely. Obama has not
said whether or not he would veto legislation in the event it reaches
his desk.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.