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TransCanada: If we can’t build Keystone, we want $15 billion

  

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Via:  pj  •  8 years ago  •  18 comments

TransCanada: If we can’t build Keystone, we want $15 billion

TransCanada isn’t taking no for an answer. In November, President Obama rejected the company’s plans to build the Keystone XL pipeline. Now the company is fighting that decision, just as it had threaten ed to do : It’s suing America and seeking $15 billion in damages.

On Wednesday, TransCanada filed suit in a U.S. court in Texas, arguing that Obama didn’t have constitutional authority to deny a permit for the pipeline. It also announced its intention to file a claim under the North American Free Trade Agreement, seeking monetary compensation. As The Wall Street Journal explains , “The company, which has spent $3.1 billion on the project already including on pipe and payments to landowners, said the $15 billion damage claim includes compensation for foregone tolls and other profit it otherwise would have earned.” Perhaps the money would also compensate the company for hurt feelings, those long nights searching the internet for stock photography to fill out the website keystone-xl.com , and faded dreams of the sound of oil sludge traveling from the Canadian tar sands down to the Gulf of Mexico, which, before the price of oil tanked a year ago, would have sounded like a thousand cash registers ringing in unison.

Of course, oil prices are so low today that it doesn’t make much financial sense to mine the Alberta tar sands anymore. Obama might actually have done TransCanada a favor in rejecting its plan — if it had gotten the approval it wanted, it would have a very expensive pipeline on its hands, and probably fewer customers than expected on either end.

Trade experts say TransCanada’s NAFTA claim is a long shot . If the company wins in arbitration, it will be the first time that the U.S. has lost a case filed under NAFTA’s Chapter 11.

But even if TransCanada doesn’t win this one, this claim could be a sign of more to come. Obama has made the passage of another NAFTA-style trade agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a key priority of his last term. The TPP includes a lot of nations that are home to corporations that, like TransCanada, have significant investments in the United States. Environmentalists are warning that under these types of trade deals, any tightening of environmental regulations could lead to damage claims and huge demands for money.

“The suit is a reminder that we shouldn’t be signing new trade agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership that allow corporations to sue governments that try and keep fossil fuels in the ground,” Jason Kowalski of 350.org told Reuters .

TransCanada filed suit in a U.S. court in Texas


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PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ    8 years ago

Curious to see whether Transcanada will win and how/if this will affect trade policies going forward. 

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     8 years ago

A counter suit against Canada for every spill that has occurred in the U.S. with pipelines owned by them. 15 billion is a great figure to start with.

 
 
 
Dean Moriarty
Professor Quiet
link   Dean Moriarty    8 years ago

Would not be the first time the courts stuck down one of Obamas overreach of power. 

 
 
 
PJ
Masters Quiet
link   seeder  PJ  replied to  Dean Moriarty   8 years ago

I certainly don't have any issue with the courts overturning any decisions that are unconstitutional or an overreach as you put it but in this instance it was actually Congress that enacted a law requiring the President to sign it or veto it within 60 days.  It's possible that the State Department rejected Transcanada's request to suspend their application because of the 60 day timeline that Congress enacted but I don't know enough to really make that claim.  The outcome will be interesting.

 
 
 
Larry Hampton
Professor Quiet
link   Larry Hampton    8 years ago

Good; $15 Billion is worth being done with the pipeline, and telling them to fuck off.

Write them a check today.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   Buzz of the Orient    8 years ago

Many years ago when I had money, I had invested in Trans-Canada Pipelines, but I knew even then that it was basically an American-owned and American-run corporation. Although two-thirds of the directors are Canadian residents, that is to satisfy the legal requirements of a Canadian corporation.  There are many American corporations/owners operating in Canada through such Canadian corporations, just as through globalization American owned corporations operate all over the world.  So don't blame Canada, even though South Park does.

 
 
 
Petey Coober
Freshman Silent
link   Petey Coober    8 years ago

Interestingly now would be a really good time to have the pipeline completed and delivering heavy tar sands to the US . In the US we have an overabundance of ultra-light condensate . If combined with the heavy tar sands it would make an ideal input into the refining industry .

 
 

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