The draft
supplemental environmental impact statement for the rerouted Keystone XL tar-sands pipeline has already come in for some heavy criticism. Not the least of which was
Lisa Song's and
Brad Johnson's revelations about how closely tied to the oil industry the companies who contracted to write the impact statement were.
Steve Horn has looked into the background of one of them, ERM, and found it had "has done studies on behalf of both R.J. Reynolds and Philip Morris, penning a report titled 'Fundamentals of Environmental Management' for the latter." The company, Horn wrote, has exploited the tobacco playbook:
"Doubt is our product," a tobacco industry document once laid out the playbook, "since it is the best means of competing with the 'body of fact' that exists in the minds of the general public. It is also the means of establishing a controversy."
Now, John H. Cushman Jr.
has come to another conclusion regarding the eco-assessment:
The surprising message of the State Department's latest Keystone review—that the decision whether to approve the disputed pipeline won't have much effect on the environment—can be traced to the way the agency framed the report.
The study presents an analysis of how markets will adjust if the pipeline isn't built. But lawyers and pipeline opponents say that approach allowed the State Department to dodge the central question that the National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, poses about major federal decisions: What would it mean for the environment, including for climate change, if the project is built?
Instead, the report looked at what might happen if the pipeline is rejected and declared that any benefits to the global climate would be trivial. Canadian producers would continue to ship oil sands products to U.S. refineries by other means, such as rail, the report concluded, and greenhouse gas emissions from this unusually dirty oil would continue more or less unabated.
That approach "is not in keeping with the letter or the spirit of NEPA," said Pat Parenteau, an environmental lawyer at the Vermont Law School. "It stands the whole concept of examining the consequences of your actions on its head, it really does."
Calling the State Department's approach "highly suspect," "very questionable," and "very disingenuous," Parenteau predicted: "There is going to be litigation if this is approved."
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Blast from the Past. At Daily Kos on this date in 2007—Impeach Gonzales:
Of course the people at the highest levels of the White House were involved in the prosecutor purge. That can't come as any surprise to anyone who's paid a modicum of attention to the machinations of this administration for the past six years. Of course Rove is in the thick of it.
While Rove's role is interesting, don't lose sight of the fact that it is Alberto Gonzales, confirmed by the Senate to serve as the top law enforcement officer of the land, who swore in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee that he understood that as Attorney General he would serve the Constitution above the president. Don't forget it was Alberto Gonzales who testified under oath before the Senate Judiciary Committee on January 18, 2007 that none of the firings were politically motivated.
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Tweet of the Day:
If, in your last moments of life, someone told you how much of your life you'd spent waiting for webpages to load, you'd weep.
— @Toure via Twitter for iPad
On today's
Kagro in the Morning show,
Greg Dworkin with a Team 26 update, and more on guns as a public health issue. Conservative backlash against departure from the "Hastert Rule." Peggy Noonan's profoundly stupid article. Which one? The one about how she had a sad because her hotel had no footmen.
Mother Jones explains in "All Work and No Pay."
Armando joined to discuss NRO crying foul over conservatives being called out as Calhounists, and give some poignant examples. Finally, we began on Robert Parry's "Rethinking Watergate/Iran-Contra."
High Impact Posts. Top Comments. Overnight News Digest.