[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 73 (Wednesday, May 22, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H2843-H2844]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NORTHERN ROUTE APPROVAL ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Dakota (Mr. Cramer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CRAMER. Mr. Speaker, this week, the House of Representatives is
going to vote on a very important piece of legislation that should be
unnecessary.
Due to the President's objection--at the insistence of Hollywood and
the EPA--a critical piece of North America's energy security puzzle
languishes on a desk in the Oval Office while thousands of unemployed
workers collect government benefits instead of a paycheck. That is why
I cosponsored and am doing all I can to pass H.R. 3, the Keystone
pipeline Northern Route Approval Act, a bill that renders the northern
route of the pipeline approved for construction, eliminating the need
for a Presidential permit.
[[Page H2844]]
As vast reserves of oil are discovered and new technologies unlocked,
energy security in this decade is well within our reach. The amount of
oil that could be flowing to U.S. refineries in the Keystone XL
represents nearly 50 percent of the oil that we currently import from
the Middle East.
Mr. Speaker, in addition to sitting on two of the subcommittees that
held hearings on this legislation, I have a long history of involvement
with TransCanada and the Keystone pipeline as a former environmental
regulator in North Dakota. From 2003 until my election to Congress last
year, I carried the pipeline portfolio as one of three members of the
North Dakota Public Service Commission.
As you might imagine, the oil and gas pipeline construction business
is robust in my State, as the Bakken shale development has elevated
North Dakota to the position of the number two producing State in the
country.
One of the pipelines we sited while I was on the PSC was the original
TransCanada Keystone pipeline. It carries over 500,000 barrels of crude
from the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin in Alberta to U.S.
refineries in Illinois and Oklahoma.
The first 217 miles of this pipeline actually run through our State.
It crosses the border in Cavalier County, North Dakota, and runs
through seven more counties, crossing 600 landowners' land, two scenic
rivers, and includes five pumping stations.
While not universally loved, I can tell you that not a single inch of
this line in North Dakota required condemnation proceedings--not
because I was such a great regulator, but because I represent such
great citizens. Our citizens understand the value of energy security
and the jobs that energy development creates, and that same sentiment
exists in our Nation today.
The environmental safeguards we demanded on the Keystone are rigorous
and appropriate. They've been tested and they work.
I toured the Keystone during construction and met many of the men and
women, who were grateful for the good-paying jobs that built the line,
and many other local restaurant and hotel proprietors, retailers,
subcontractors who were happy to have the work and the business. The
local officials and school administrators are grateful for the tax
revenue that would not be there but for the Keystone pipeline, and, of
course, the tax relief it provides local farmers, in addition to the
easement payments, are a blessing.
Mr. Speaker, I've sited hundreds, maybe thousands of miles of oil
pipelines that operate safely and efficiently throughout North Dakota,
but none as thoroughly vetted and safe as the Keystone XL.
I've heard the arguments from my friends across the aisle who claim
the Keystone only helps Canada and does nothing to the benefit of the
United States. They also claim that the carbon footprint is too great.
The fact of the matter is the Keystone has already signed up over
60,000 barrels of North Dakota crude and has the capacity for at least
100,000 barrels.
Today, 71 percent of North Dakota crude is shipped by rail. Now, I
have nothing against trains, but railing oil costs more and is not as
safe as pipelines. It also requires trucks to get the oil to the train.
According to the director of the North Dakota Department of Mineral
Resources, Lynn Helms, approval of the Keystone XL will cause two
things to happen: 300 to 500 truckloads per day will be taken off North
Dakota highways, and there will be one to two fewer trains leaving the
State. He calculates that greenhouse gas emissions from rail are 1.8
times and trucks 2.9 times greater than the emissions from pipeline
transportation, and spills from truck transportation occur at three to
four times the rate of spills from pipelines.
Approval of the Keystone will result in 450,000 to 950,000 kilograms
per day less in greenhouse gas emissions in North Dakota alone, as well
as significant decreases in dust, and 60 to 80 fewer spills per year.
North Dakota officials also expect highway fatalities will be reduced
by three to six per year, and injury crashes by 85 to 150 annually if
the Keystone XL is built.
Mr. Speaker, America's national security and America's economic
security are tied directly to America's energy security, and the
Keystone XL pipeline is a critical weapon in that security.
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