(The Canadian Press) In a shift in strategy, the company that wants to build an oil pipeline from western Canada to Texas said Tuesday that the project will have no measurable effect on global warming.
Alex Pourbaix, TransCanada Corp's (TSX: T.TRP, Stock Forum) (NYSE: TRP, Stock Forum) president for energy and oil pipelines, said opponents of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline have grossly inflated its likely impact on emissions of greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.
Canada represents just two per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, Pourbaix said at a forum sponsored by a manufacturing group that supports the pipeline.
Oilsands concentrated in Alberta, where the 2,700-kilometre pipeline would start, make up five per cent of Canada's total, Pourbaix said.
"Simple math tells us, therefore, that the oilsands represent only one-tenth of one per cent of global greenhouse emissions," he said.
"Even if production from the oilsands were to double, the (greenhouse gas) contribution from the oil sands would be immaterial to global" greenhouse gas production. Pourbaix's comments came two days after a rally Sunday by pipeline opponents drew an estimated 35,000 people to Washington.
Organizers, including the Sierra Club and other environmental groups, billed the event as the largest climate rally in U.S. history. Thousands of people marched past the White House to urge President Barack Obama to reject the $7 billion US pipeline and take other steps to fight climate change.
Opponents say the pipeline would carry "dirty oil" derived from tar sands that requires significantly more energy to produce than conventional crude oil and emits up to 20 per cent more greenhouse gases.
At Tuesday's forum, organized by the National Association of Manufacturers, Pourbaix took on the climate argument head-on. He and other TransCanada executives have previously emphasized the pipeline's safety, the jobs it will create and the fact the oil comes from a U.S. neighbor and ally.
"Our opponents are trying to make this debate about GHGs," he said, referring to greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide that are emitted as oil is produced and refined.
"So let's look at Canada's contribution to global GHGs." Pourbaix called Canada a leader on climate change and noted that Alberta was the first jurisdiction in North America to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
In a shift in strategy, the company that wants to build an oil pipeline from western Canada to Texas said Tuesday that the project will have no measurable effect on global warming.
Alex Pourbaix, TransCanada's president for energy and oil pipelines, said opponents of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline have grossly inflated its likely impact on emissions of greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.
Canada represents just two per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, Pourbaix said at a forum sponsored by a manufacturing group that supports the pipeline.
Oilsands concentrated in Alberta, where the 2,700-kilometre pipeline would start, make up five per cent of Canada's total, Pourbaix said.
"Simple math tells us, therefore, that the oilsands represent only one-tenth of one per cent of global greenhouse emissions," he said.
"Even if production from the oilsands were to double, the (greenhouse gas) contribution from the oil sands would be immaterial to global" greenhouse gas production. Pourbaix's comments came two days after a rally Sunday by pipeline opponents drew an estimated 35,000 people to Washington.
Organizers, including the Sierra Club and other environmental groups, billed the event as the largest climate rally in U.S. history. Thousands of people marched past the White House to urge President Barack Obama to reject the $7 billion US pipeline and take other steps to fight climate change.
Opponents say the pipeline would carry "dirty oil" derived from tar sands that requires significantly more energy to produce than conventional crude oil and emits up to 20 per cent more greenhouse gases.
At Tuesday's forum, organized by the National Association of Manufacturers, Pourbaix took on the climate argument head-on. He and other TransCanada executives have previously emphasized the pipeline's safety, the jobs it will create and the fact the oil comes from a U.S. neighbor and ally.
"Our opponents are trying to make this debate about GHGs," he said, referring to greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide that are emitted as oil is produced and refined.
"So let's look at Canada's contribution to global GHGs." Pourbaix called Canada a leader on climate change and noted that Alberta was the first jurisdiction in North America to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
The province also has imposed a carbon tax, an action the Obama administration has said it will not propose.
Oil carried by Keystone will displace heavy crude from Venezuela, Nigeria and other countries that also contributes to global warming, Pourbaix said.
"You could shut down oilsands production tomorrow and it would have absolutely no measurable impact on climate change," he said.
Michael Mann, a climate scientist at Pennsylvania State University, said Pourbaix's comments appeared to be based on "some rather rosy assumptions" about oilsands production.
First, the calculation does not take into account the energy cost of refining and transporting the crude from oilsands, nor does it account for a huge reserve that could make the Alberta oilsands a key contributor to global warming in the future, he said.
Mann, who opposes the pipeline, said U.S. approval of Keystone XL would encourage increased development of the heavily-polluting tar sands. Canadian officials have called development of the oilsands a national priority.
By endorsing the pipeline, "we may be insuring that a much larger amount (of the oil reserves) will be economically viable," Mann said.
Obama calls climate change a serious threat and has urged Congress to combat it. In his State of the Union address last week, Obama said he will use executive authority to cut greenhouse gas pollution if Congress fails to act.
Obama has twice thwarted the Keystone XL pipeline because of concerns about its route through sensitive land in Nebraska, but has not indicated how he will decide on the pipeline since Nebraska's governor approved a new route last month.
The State Department has authority over the project because it crosses an international border, but both sides on the issue expect Obama to make the final decision.