A PHP Error was encountered

Severity: Warning

Message: Invalid argument supplied for foreach()

Filename: twitter_timeline/pi.twitter_timeline.php

Line Number: 440

A PHP Error was encountered

Severity: Warning

Message: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/dirtyoil/public_html/cms/codeigniter/system/core/Exceptions.php:170)

Filename: core/Common.php

Line Number: 408

Where Is the Climate Leadership? We Need to Get It Right on Keystone XL - Blog - Dirty Oil Sands

Where Is the Climate Leadership? We Need to Get It Right on Keystone XL - Blog - Dirty Oilsands

Home » Blog » Where Is the Climate Leadership? We Need to Get It Right on Keystone XL

Blog

Where Is the Climate Leadership? We Need to Get It Right on Keystone XL

By Robert Redford | The Huffington Post

Monday, March 04, 2013

Read this blog post on the originating site

Mr. Secretary, I am disappointed. I thought that we all understood that to fight climate change, we have to be able to say "no" to dirty energy projects. Our friends around the world are looking to us for climate leadership and it starts with drawing the line at tar sands expansion. It also means that we need to give health and environment a fair shake in the environmental review of a dirty energy project such as the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. Yet the draft environmental review prepared by the State Department for Keystone XL misses what folks in industry themselves are saying: the Keystone XL project is necessary for expansion of tar sands. We know this means that Keystone XL will make climate change worse.

Once again, the State Department acknowledges that tar sands are dirtier than conventional oil and will make climate change worse. So how, can it then not tell us about what this means for our climate? Somehow, the State Department claims that tar sands will be developed anyway so it doesn't need to look at the harm done by expansion. This just doesn't make sense. Our friends in British Columbia are saying no to tar sands pipelines to the west coast. Our friends in eastern Canada and New England are saying no to tar sands pipelines to the east coast. Rail is a pretty expensive alternative. What is left? Keystone XL's path to the Gulf Coast.

But don't just listen to me. Let's look at what some of the industry's own experts are saying.

Continue reading on originating site

Tagged with: keystone xl, pipeline, climate change, keystone, environmental impact statement, opposition

News

Alberta’s carbon tax is a bold move. Sadly, it’s not enough

April 05, 2013 (Tzeporah Berman | The Globe and Mail)

Energy board changes pipeline complaint rules

April 05, 2013 (Gloria Galloway | The Globe and Mail)

CP oil spill in northern Ontario larger than first reported

April 04, 2013 (Nathan Vanderklippe | The Globe and Mail)

Subscribe to The Dirt, the best weekly review of tar sands and pipeline campaign news and commentary.

* indicates required

@dirtyoilsands On Twitter