Pipeline hurdle gone, foes dig in

Coalition hopes to sway State Department on Keystone

Keystone XL Pipeline opponent Tom Genung (center) of Hastings, Neb., makes a point to Zack Hamilton (right), the public-advocacy coordinator for the Nebraska Farmers Union, as Sierra Club lawyer Ken Winston (left) and rancher Randy Thompson listen during at a meeting last week at Thompson’s home in Martell, Neb.
Keystone XL Pipeline opponent Tom Genung (center) of Hastings, Neb., makes a point to Zack Hamilton (right), the public-advocacy coordinator for the Nebraska Farmers Union, as Sierra Club lawyer Ken Winston (left) and rancher Randy Thompson listen during at a meeting last week at Thompson’s home in Martell, Neb.

With a sense of grim determination, a group of unlikely allies has begun gathering at kitchen tables, in churches and along fence rows here to plot what could be the final battle in a four-year conflict over the Keystone XL pipeline.

After months of quiet, a recent State Department report dismissing the pipeline’s ecological impact has cleared the way for a final decision on the plan for transporting oil extracted from the Alberta tar sands more than 1,700 miles to refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast.

An unusual coalition of environmentalists, property-rights advocates and ranchers is now attempting to find new ways to derail a project that, more than ever, seems to be headed for approval in a nation eager for jobs and energy development.

“It’s been four very long, very difficult years,” said one of the opposition’s chief organizers, Jane Kleeb of Hastings.

But the group is buoyed by its success so far in stalling the project and in bringing so many disparate interests into the fight.

“I’m associated with people I never dreamed I would have been associated with,” said Randy Thompson, a Nebraska rancher and self-described conservative Republican, at a meeting of activists at his rural home south of Lincoln. “There’s a stigma on people considered environmentalists. I had that concept.”

The opposition effort is now focused on the new secretary of state, John Kerry, who will make a recommendation to President Barack Obama on whether to green light the project. The previous secretary of state, Hillary Rodham Clinton, was believed to be in favor of the plan before it was stalled by objections over the route.

Opponents and supporters will face off at public hearing in Nebraska, expected to be held later this spring.

Company officials with TransCanada, the pipeline builder, said they are confident they have enough public support along the pipeline’s seven-state route, further bolstered by the favorable environmental impact report, to get clearance to begin.

“The sooner we get clarity on schedule, the sooner we can put these people to work,” said TransCanada spokesman James Miller.

The politics surrounding the pipeline have changed since last spring, when the administration slowed the approval process because of the local protests. At the time, Nebraska’s Republican Gov. Dave Heineman objected to the pipeline’s route through the ecologically sensitive Sand Hills area.

But Heineman was mollified after the company moved the pipeline’s route farther east. Both Democratic and Republican officials in the affected states, plus business and labor interests, now largely support the project because of the estimated 13,000 construction jobs it will create during the two years of construction.

“It creates jobs and increases our nation’s energy supply,” said U.S. Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb. “There is no reason for President Obama or the State Department to delay a project that is so clearly in the nation’s best interest.”

The pipeline would transport up to 800,000 barrels of oil per day to Gulf Coast and Midwest refineries, much of it for export. Advocates contend the pipeline would be more energy-efficient than transporting the oil by truck or rail.

But the opponents, especially those in Nebraska, are organized and politically diverse. Hundreds of ranchers and landowners have challenged the idea of a foreign based corporation seizing land in the United States.

“No foreign corporation should ever be able to come through and take your property without a permit,” said Susan Dunavan, who owns 80 acres of native prairie in southeast Nebraska and is a conservative Republican.

TransCanada is based in Calgary, Alberta.

Meanwhile, Abbi Kleinschmidt and Jenni Harrington, who are liberal Democrats with a family farm on the pipeline route near Benedict, complain that a pipeline would undercut the fight against global warming.

“It’s about awareness and acceptance of climate change,” said Sierra Club lawyer Ken Winston of Lincoln.

Other landowners also worry about risks to the Ogalala aquifer, the vast underground shallow water table that is the state’s primary water source.

Opponents have been approaching landowners to persuade them not to accept TransCanada’s money to allow access. They are also holding meetings in towns along the route, airing television ads, mailing letters to the White House and trying to meet with members of Congress.

Last week, opponents who met at Thompson’s house discussed the possibility of protesting the new route because it crosses land thought to contain Ponca American Indian artifacts.

The variety of people in the group helps in brainstorming the campaign, they said.

“Being brought together really opened people’s eyes. We’re all more similar than we may have thought,” said Zack Hamilton, a thick-bearded organic farmer.

Information for this report was contributed by Matthew Daly of the Associated Press.

Business, Pages 23 on 03/19/2013

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