http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/30/us/keystone-xl-pipeline-nebraska-opponents.html
We talked about the pipeline in class today so I thought I’d do a little research on it!
The Keystone Pipeline was proposed six years ago by the energy company TransCanada. It is supposed to transport crude oil 1,179 miles from Alberta, Canada to southern Nebraska. The pipeline, although partially built has been received with mixed feelings and a ton of protest. Unlike other environmental issues, it is not just the environmental extremists who are against the pipeline. Native Americans, farmers, city dwellers, elderly and even some conservatives are opposed to the continuation of the pipeline.
Arguments against the pipeline include concerns that any type of spill would irreparably harm the Ogallala Aquifer, the source of water used to irrigate cropland and supply taps across a wide portion of the heartland. In response, one might say that they are taking extra care to prevent spillage. Regardless of the ignorance of that statement because spills are always possible, the pipeline should not be built solely on the fact that is supports the extraction of tar sands and increases our dependence on fossil fuel. The oil extracted from tar sands is not clean oil. It is dirty, grainy oil and it requires a lot more energy and water to make it usable than we get from it’s use. The process of extraction is not good for the environment and it creates very ugly eye sores in the surrounding area.
The article linked talks about a protest that happened saturday in Neligh, Nebraska. A patch of farmland became a concert with Willie Nelson and Neil Young to protest the Keystone Pipeline. 8,000 people attended the protest and many spoke emotionally and at length about their opposition to the pipeline and the problems they fear it portends.
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