http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/11/u...delay-pipeline-decision-past-12-election.html
Keystone Pipeline decision "delayed."
USA is in desperate need of jobs - the Keystone Pipeline is expected to create thousands.
USA is in desperate need of a stable source of energy - Canada is about as stable as they come.
So why delay the decision until after the election? Easy. This won't piss off the pipeline champions enough to lose their vote, and it won't piss off the environmentalists enough to lose their vote. I good leader is capable of making decisions. Tough decisions. This just looks like another case of kicking the can down the road to the next guy...
Meanwhile, Canada continues to court China as the source for Canadian oilsands exports:
http://www.torontosun.com/2011/11/07/canada-courts-china-to-buy-canadian
OTTAWA - While the Americans mulled Monday whether to accept a proposal to build an oil pipeline to Texas from Alberta, Canada was giving another eager suitor a peek of the goods that come with a long-term affair.
Joe Oliver paid his first visit to China as natural resources minister to court officials of the worldâs second largest economy â a country with big eyes for Canadaâs bounty of natural assets.
âChina is the biggest consumer of energy in the world,â Oliver said from Beijing. âWe have the resources China needs. We are open for business.â
Keystone Pipeline decision "delayed."
USA is in desperate need of jobs - the Keystone Pipeline is expected to create thousands.
USA is in desperate need of a stable source of energy - Canada is about as stable as they come.
So why delay the decision until after the election? Easy. This won't piss off the pipeline champions enough to lose their vote, and it won't piss off the environmentalists enough to lose their vote. I good leader is capable of making decisions. Tough decisions. This just looks like another case of kicking the can down the road to the next guy...
Meanwhile, Canada continues to court China as the source for Canadian oilsands exports:
http://www.torontosun.com/2011/11/07/canada-courts-china-to-buy-canadian
OTTAWA - While the Americans mulled Monday whether to accept a proposal to build an oil pipeline to Texas from Alberta, Canada was giving another eager suitor a peek of the goods that come with a long-term affair.
Joe Oliver paid his first visit to China as natural resources minister to court officials of the worldâs second largest economy â a country with big eyes for Canadaâs bounty of natural assets.
âChina is the biggest consumer of energy in the world,â Oliver said from Beijing. âWe have the resources China needs. We are open for business.â
