The Keystone Pipeline is a pipeline system that holds oil and it runs through the United States and Canada. More specifically, it starts in Alberta, Canada at the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin and travels to oil refineries in Texas and Illinois as well as oil tank farms and an oil pipeline distribution center located in Cushing, Oklahoma. The Keystone Pipeline consists of three phases as well as one more operation that was awaiting approval but has been rejected. The first phase is the pipeline bringing the oil from Hardisty, Alberta to a connection in Steele City, Nebraska which then disperses into refineries in Illinois. The second phase is an extension that leads from Steele City to distribution and storage facilities…
Before one can form an opinion on whether the Keystone Pipeline should or should not be built, they should first know what it is, and hear both sides of the argument.…
The Keystone Pipeline, also known as Keystone XL, is a 1,179-mile-long pipeline from oil fields in Western Canada to the Midwestern United States. Specifically, this pipeline will extend from Alberta, Canada to Steele City, Nebraska with plans to link to an existing pipeline that reaches to the Gulf Coast. Despite the advantages this pipeline will produce, it will also create various negative effects regarding wildlife and inhabitants of these areas, economic and political issues, as well as challenge government policies and regulations.…
The Keystone Pipeline has been in news for several months and has been the subject of scrutiny, political bantering and environmentalist activism. Keystone Pipeline is a transcontinental synthetic oil project that runs from Canada to the Gulf Coast. Construction of such a pipeline bears many risk associated with ecosystem disruption and environmental hazards. President Obama blocked the pipeline’s extension noting several studies that the pipeline would have adverse impact on air and water supplies.…
"What You Need to Know About the Dakota Access Pipeline Protest | Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community." Common Dreams, www.commondreams.org /views/2016/09/09/what-you-need-know-about-dakota-access-pipeline-protest. Gail Ablow shares what is happening among the Sioux and the Dakota access pipeline with her personal analysis, to inform individuals what they should know about the event. She clarifies the threats and dangers that the Dakota Access Pipeline can bring to the Sioux Native Indian tribe. Also, the protest between the two and how it’s affecting the state of North Dakota. She also explains about the Dakota Access pipeline and the intentions of it being put in place. She goes into various details about how the pipeline…
In “Native Americans Celebrate pause of North Dakota Pipeline, Vow to Fight on,” author, Dave Thompson,…
Saving the Native Americans land, Bill Mckibben writes “ Why Dakota is the New Keystone” that incorporates a great deal of culture, pride, and courage. Mckibben goes in depth about Native Americans defending their land against an oil company that could cause them harm to their basic necessities. He also uses strong points of word choice, pathos and tone to paint a detailed picture of what is happening. With using these techniques he is able to so strongly deliver his message easily.…
According to Robert Boos from Pri, the keystone pipeline will go through First Nation peoples lands. This means that the lands people have worked so hard to keep sacred and undisturbed will have people in trucks and cranes disturbing their peace for a while. Later, a pipeline will go straight through their lands. According to these lands have been sacred to the native people for hundreds of years. The first colonists were terrible to the natives, but over time Americans realized how horrible they were to them and now Americans have a chance to prove that they believe that Native Americans should be respected. According to the Washington post, sacred native lands will be disturbed and that should not be an option for the keystone pipeline. The keystone pipeline would go through sacred native lands and that alone should be a deal-breaker for building…
On Friday, November 6th, President Obama announced his rejection of the application for the completion of the Keystone XL oil pipeline. After many years of consideration, Obama announced his rejection saying “The pipeline would not have made a serious impact on…the American people’s prospects for the future," and “[It] would not make a meaningful long-term contribution to our economy.”…
The Tar Sands Keystone XL pipeline is a topic that some support, other oppose, but most do not realize the entire scope of this endeavor. There are four phases of this project and if it is constructed on its proposed path would begin in Alberta, Canada; go through Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Oklahoma, until it reaches Texas. The pipeline's 1,932 miles will cross through the middle of the United States, which is more than twice the size of the Trans Alaska Pipeline. Furthermore, the Keystone XL pipeline would cross the Ogallala aquifer that supplies drinking water for approximately 8 states and provides irrigation for millions of acres of farmland that supplies our nation’s food.…
The Keystone XL pipeline project is a project that aims to reduce the American dependence on oil from Venezuela and the Middle East by forty percent. The construction of this pipeline is vital to the security and economic growth of the United States. The pipeline project is aiming to be a 1,179 mile, 36-inch-diameter crude oil pipeline. This project is a combined effort of the Canadian and American governments. The pipeline is proposed to run from Hardisty, Alberta, Canada to Steele City, Nebraska, USA. In addition to the transportation of crude oil from Canada, the Keystone XL pipeline project is projected to support an increase in crude oil production in the…
The United States is divided half and half on the topic of oil pipelines. Some people believe that oil pipelines, such as the Keystone XL will be the first step to isolating ourselves from depending on outside threats for resources. Others believe that oil pipelines have the ability to contaminate the world, not only through water and climate, but also through the economy. The strength of crude oil companies needs to be weakened by informing the public on what really goes on behind the scenes, what happens to towns that have oil pipelines running through them, and why protesters were so frantic to stop the Keystone XL Pipeline from being built any farther south.…
Have you ever wondered how toxic sludge is transported from where it was created to where it is disposed of? Well, this has become a hot button issue in the White House. Apparently, there are enormous pipes buried in ground right now transporting barrels of tar sands oil in America’s mid-west. The purpose of these pipes is to move crude oil from one place to another. Another reason for the Pipelines is to meet the needs of the American consumers. Texas has one of the largest oil manufacturing industries in all of North America; and that alone is not supplying the needs of Americans. The Keystone XL Pipeline will have a positive impact for The United States. For instance, in 2010, a 1,900 mile pipeline was approved to run from Alberta, Canada to Illinois. This line produces 35 hundred barrels of tar sands oil a day. In 2011, they added 300 miles to Oklahoma; adding this line increased the production to about 590,000 barrels of tar sands oil a day. TransCanada has applied for a permit to add 1,700 miles of pipeline from Alberta, Canada to Steele City, Nebraska, then to connect it to Texas’s gulf coast. This could increase the barrels of tar sands oil to one million a day. TransCanada, a Canadian energy company, recently proposed a multi-billion dollar project. They are attempting to get a permit for a pipeline called, the Keystone XL Pipeline Project. The pipeline will be used to transport raw toxic tar sands oil and constructed, “from the Canadian border to connect to an existing pipeline in Steele City, Nebraska.”(UPDATE) TransCanada, who is the lead producer of the pipeline, has applied for a Presidential Permit, which is required as the pipeline will cross the Canadian/United States border. President Obama’s Administration denied the proposal. As reported, on stateimpact.npr.org, “[t]he administration said at the time that TransCanada could reapply after finding…
A big movement that has came across America’s headlines in The Dakota Access Pipeline. It has created a war between the US Government and the Indian Reservation. The pipeline would run through the Indian Reservation. The biggest argument that the Standing Rock Sioux People were bringing up were that the pipeline would be destroying the water supply to the reservation. The Indians believed it would be scorching the earth. The people of the reservation believe t “water is life”, and that they are looking out for the future of their children, with protesting against the pipeline. (Archambealt) If the pipeline was put in, it would be ruining Mother Nature by taking down 100-year-old trees, and polluting the water of the Missouri River, which is the primary drinking source for Standing Rock.(Archambealt) If there were to be an oil spill it would pollute the main source of water for the Indians. This would leave them no water to survive. The historical precedents the US would break once again would be the Laramie Treaty of 1868.(Estes) This Treaty brought peace between whites and the Sioux. The Sioux agreed to settle in the Black Hills reservation, which had wood, water and a source food which are the three things the Sioux need to survive.…
The Dakota Access Pipeline is a 1,172-mile-long underground oil pipeline that runs from North Dakota down to Illinois. The pipeline costs $3.8 billion and is owned by Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners LP. It is supposed to carry approximately 470,000 barrels of oil a day and the pipeline makes that move in oil a more cost-effective and environmentally responsible manner. The plan is to construct it through the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Those lands are considered sacred to the native people and the lake where the pipeline would run under is a big supply of water for the nearby tribes, one big concern with the pipeline running under lake Oahe is when the line may break it will contaminate the supply of water. As we all know there…