[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 1]
[House]
[Page 503]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE AND THE K-FAST BILL

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, across the globe, Iran continues its 
saber rattling. The little fella from the desert, Ahmadinejad, 
threatens to block the Strait of Hormuz and all the oil shipments going 
through it.
  This worries Americans who can't afford for the price of gasoline to 
go up.
  What if we made unstable Middle Eastern countries irrelevant to our 
energy security? Imagine a place where the United States actually 
controlled its own energy destiny. There are two different paths to 
that world. The administration and environmental obstructionists will 
tell you the only way to energy independence is through so-called 
``clean and green'' energy projects funded at taxpayer expense.
  This may sound good in a sound bite, but these projects are 
expensive, unreliable, and in many cases they continue to fail.
  Cases in point, three companies: Solyndra, Ener1, and Beacon Power. 
In each of these cases, the Federal Government has taken taxpayer money 
and gambled it on risky projects. With Solyndra, half a billion 
taxpayer dollars were poured into a company that was doomed to fail. 
The result: Solyndra went belly up, 1,000 people lost their jobs, and 
the American people will never see a refund on their money.
  Clean energy may be a noble goal, but we're just not there yet.
  The second path to controlling our energy destiny is an all-of-the-
above approach: solar, wind, nuclear, clean coal, natural gas, and yes, 
oil.
  For now, oil is the most reliable and cost-effective source of energy 
we have. That's one reason why the Keystone XL pipeline is a golden 
opportunity for our country. This project, unlike Solyndra, won't cost 
the taxpayers any of their money.
  It would bring 750,000 barrels of oil per day from our stable ally, 
Canada, down to refineries in my district in southeast Texas. Equally 
important, it would create at least 100,000 jobs in its lifetime, 
including 20,000 immediate construction and manufacturing jobs. But 
unfortunately, the administration has said no to Keystone pipeline. It 
said no to our national interest. It said no to jobs. It said no to 
energy security. It said no to our ally Canada. It said no to the will 
of the American people because most Americans support the pipeline. But 
it did say yes--yes to China, because China will probably be the 
recipient of that Canadian oil and the jobs if the pipeline is not 
built in the United States. Now, isn't that lovely?
  Keystone would enhance our energy security by bringing almost as much 
oil as we get from Saudi Arabia to the United States. It would help 
enhance our foreign policy by bolstering our relationship with Canada 
instead of depending on unstable Middle Eastern countries. But radical 
obstructionists got their way when they took to the streets in front of 
the White House and threatened their support for the President.
  They seem to conveniently forget that pipelines are the safest way to 
transport oil.
  Failure to approve the pipeline is putting our national security, 
energy security, and economic security at risk. That is why I have 
introduced, along with my friend Dan Boren from Oklahoma, the 
bipartisan Keystone for a Secure Tomorrow Act, or K-FAST for short. 
This bill would allow Congress to act immediately and approve the 
permit for the Keystone XL pipeline.
  There is precedent for congressional approval of pipelines. In 1973, 
the same type of special interest groups were holding back the permit 
for the Trans-Alaska pipeline. After 4 years of delay, Congress finally 
took direct action and successfully approved that pipeline.
  I'm pleased that a bipartisan group of 45 Senators agree that 
Congress should approve the Keystone pipeline. The Hoeven-Lugar-Vitter 
bill, similar to my bill, would do that.
  While green energy is a worthwhile ambition, we simply cannot afford 
to reject a reliable supply of energy.
  So while the administration continues to say no to Americans, 
Congress has the obligation and the legal ability to say yes. Let's 
make Keystone pipeline a reality.
  It's time we create jobs, bring energy to the United States, and make 
Middle Eastern politics and turmoil irrelevant to our national and 
energy security. It's time to think of the American people because they 
can't wait.
  And that's just the way it is.

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