EPA says TransCanada’s environmental report doesn’t address key concerns

By Maria Sudekum Fisher, AP
Wednesday, July 21, 2010

EPA: Keystone XL impact statement needs revising

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Environmental Protection Agency said the draft environmental impact study for TransCanada Corp.’s proposed oil pipeline from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico is inadequate and should be revised.

Keystone XL would move oil from Alberta, Canada, down through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska in the upper Great Plains. It would then merge with a pipeline under construction in Kansas before breaking off again to pass through Oklahoma, to Texas and to the Gulf of Mexico.

Environmental groups have raised concerns that the pipeline could pollute air and water supplies and harm migratory birds and other wildlife. They have also speculated about what they consider inadequate pipeline safety and emergency spill response.

In a letter to the State Department, EPA’s assistant administrator for enforcement and compliance assurance, Cynthia Giles, said the draft environmental impact statement failed to adequately address those concerns.

The impact from “air emissions from refineries and the potential contamination of drinking water supplies from an oil spill have not been fully evaluated,” Giles said in the letter dated July 16.

She also said the study also does not evaluate “evaluate the environmental justice issues associated with potential impacts to communities in Port Arthur, Texas, where numerous industrial facilities, including chemical plants and a hazardous waste incinerator, are contributing to the residents’ overall exposure to contaminants.”

The agency said the State Department should revise the study and open it up for more public comment.

TransCanada spokesman Terry Cunha said the company disagrees and that the State Department “did a thorough and complete job in preparing the Draft EIS.”

He said TransCanada looked “forward to the environmental review process continuing through DOS’s review of comments and preparation of the Final EIS.”

The EPA sent its report to the State Department, which has to approve the pipeline because it crosses an international border.

The department was reviewing comments from eight agencies on the draft environmental report. The public comment period on the current draft document ended July 2.

“The State Department seriously considers all public comments received as part of the public comment process. However, we will not have a detailed response until we complete the review process,” State Department spokeswoman Jill W. Dietrich said in an e-mail.

Keystone XL would move oil from Alberta, Canada, down through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska in the upper Great Plains, and then from Oklahoma to Texas and into the Gulf of Mexico. Under its planned route, the pipeline would cross several rivers and aquifers, including the Ogallala aquifer which supplies water to several Midwestern states.

TransCanada has said the pipeline would provide a reliable source of oil to the U.S. from a stable trading partner and would not adversely affect the environment.

Cunha has said construction of Keystone XL should provide more than $20 billion in new spending to the U.S. economy and more than $585 million in state and local taxes in states along the pipeline route.

Susan Casey-Lefkowitz, director of international programs for the National Resources Defense Council, said the environmental advocacy group was “happy to see how seriously EPA was taking the environmental and public health concerns around the pipeline,” and said other pipelines have not undergone such scrutiny.

Keystone has already won approval for pipelines that move oil from Canada through the Dakotas, Nebraska and Missouri to Illinois, as well as the section being built in Kansas.

“But of course … the first Keystone was under the Bush administration, and the goal of the Bush administration was to push it through as quickly as possible,” she said.

She said NRDC has asked the State Department to release correspondence from other federal agencies that have responded to the Keystone XL proposal but had not seen any of those.

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