Posted In: News,
Friends of Big Oil have been making a habit in this session of Congress of threatening to scuttle “must pass” legislation in order to hasten construction of the dangerous Keystone XL pipeline. In June, yet another special interest showdown is looming as Congress takes one more stab at passing a bipartisan transportation bill that enjoys supermajority support in the Senate. At stake are than one million jobs the bill is estimated to create.
For the oil industry’s chief champion in the House, Speaker John Boehner, it’s one more chance to do the bidding of special interests by trying to force lawmakers to accept a highly controversial amendment requiring the pipeline be built. The question is – how far in this game of chicken is he willing to go? Might he scuttle one million jobs that will be created by the transportation bill so oil companies can reap profits by building the dangerous Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. NWF’s Jeremy Symons said it well a few months ago and it still applies, “Speaker Boehner is willing to put jobs at risk once again by hijacking the transportation bill.”
Here at NWF, we worked up a chart to check the spin of Keystone XL backers who are pondering scuttling the transportation bill. Those big long bars on the right represent jobs that would be created or supported by the transportation bill. Those little slivers on the left represent the industry’s own job projections by building Keystone XL. It’s below.
You can help stop the Keystone XL pipeline and tell Congress to protect wildlife instead of Big Oil profits. Click here to take action.
Editors Note: This blog was written by Tony Iallonardo with NWF







Comments
May 17th 2012
Peggy Lang - I want to know "How large actually: is The Ogalala Aquafier ? How many gallons of water does it hold? How many states is this aquafier providing water for? What is our next largest source of water available to Nebraska and is it "Clean", meaning non-toxic?
May 17th 2012
Tom Teters - The O.A. goes from S. Dak to Tex., but almost completely covers Neb. At some place it is less than 4 foot below the surface and the new location that TransCanada wants to dig into is almost completely over the O.A. Where the saturated bed if from 100-400 foot thick. All the Nebraska senators that support it are from the eastern part of the state. And NO farmers wants it on their land. Look into Alberta TarSands and the Ruination of the Athabasca River.
May 17th 2012
Tom Teters - Good O.A. article in Wikipedia