[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 192 (Wednesday, December 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8567-S8568]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Mr. President, at a time when our economy is
staggering and global unrest is making long-term energy supplies
uncertain, we are going to eventually be able to take up a bill that
has been passed by the House that would bypass the President's decision
to postpone until 2013, after the elections next year, a domestic
infrastructure project that promises 20,000 immediate jobs, and 118,000
spinoff jobs, and provides a stable energy source from our trusted
neighbor Canada.
After 3 years of unprecedented reviews by State and Federal agencies,
the administration decided to delay the Keystone XL pipeline until
after the 2012 election. Why? It would seem obvious that this is a
decision that could now be made. The studies have been done. The jobs
are needed. This is a privately financed traditional energy project. It
is truly shovel ready. It is not a temporary government stimulus
program based on wishful thinking, looking for things that can be done
around the country. It is ready to go and it is privately financed, so
there are no taxpayer dollars involved.
The pipeline is our Nation's access to the estimated 170 billion
barrels of recoverable oil in western Canadian tar sands. It will
provide energy from a reliable trading partner and friend, lessening
our dependence on oil from turbulent Middle East and North African
countries and from dictators and terrorism-supporting regimes in South
America.
This turmoil leads to price spikes and supply interruptions that
threaten our economy and our national security. If we can go forward
with the pipeline project, it would have a tremendous impact on our
Nation, where the project could stimulate $2.3 billion in new spending
and generate more than $48 million in new tax revenues just in my home
State of Texas.
The pipeline construction would result in 700,000 additional barrels
of oils per day being sent to refineries in Texas. Our State's 26
refineries account for more than 25 percent of the total U.S. oil
production, which is approximately 5 percent of worldwide capacity.
Texas refineries working at capacity are of great benefit to the
consumers of America. Oil is provided faster and more efficiently to
domestic consumers and industry, bringing down the cost of energy to
everyone in our country.
Last night the House approved this legislation. President Obama
continues to threaten to veto any bill that comes to his desk that
involves the Keystone pipeline. So I think it is fair to ask: What is
his plan? The administration recently announced the President's 5-year
blueprint for the future of America's energy resources. For example,
the plan limits the offshore energy development to less than 3 percent
of offshore areas.
The administration is decreasing our energy resources while other
countries continue to increase their energy wealth, just off our coast
in some instances, some as close as 25 miles from the U.S. waters. With
the right policies, the oil and gas industry could create 1.4 million
new jobs and raise $800 billion of additional government revenue by
2030. That would come from people working. That would come from people
in the economy buying things, creating new jobs, and paying taxes
because they are earning money. That is the way we should increase
revenue in this country, not by stimulus programs that add to our
deficit and to the debt that is going to be inherited by our children.
The administration is determined to pursue policies that limit our
utilization of our own natural resources. Most other countries in the
world are trying to develop their natural resources, and some do not
have natural resources and wish they did. America has them but we are
not using them.
We could--with a single pipeline--do something that would lower the
cost of energy and create new jobs and raise additional government
revenue. The fact that we are debating this project today in the face
of a frozen economy and rising energy insecurity is unthinkable. We do
not need more Solyndra fiascos. We do not need to waste additional
billions of taxpayer dollars to support failed businesses that would
not exist without federal subsidies.
This pipeline has not one taxpayer dollar in it. It is privately
funded and will create private industry jobs that would be jobs that
create more revenue for our country through the spending and the
creation of still further jobs.
We would be doing it with a trusted neighbor and ally, Canada. This
is something we should do. I would love to see us do it in a bipartisan
way in this Senate as the House has already done.
[[Page S8568]]
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Pennsylvania.
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