Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
The noted anti-development expert James Hansen and some other AGW supporters are out in force trying to block the proposed expansion of the existing Keystone Pipeline called the “Keystone XL”. They claim that it would be carrying “dirty oil” from the Canadian Oil Sands … and what makes oil “dirty” (other than not changing it every 3,000 miles)?
Why, CO2, of course, CO2 emissions from the Canadian oil production … as opposed to CO2 emissions from “clean oil” from Mexico, one supposes. They also claim that the oil sand production uses huge amounts of water. Finally, they say that there is a chance that at some point the new pipeline will create a spill … shocking news, I know, no pipeline has ever spilled before … and yet we continue to build them and use them. Go figure.
Knowing nothing about the project and little about the production of oil from sand, I thought I’d take a look at the situation. As is usual, I was surprised by some of the things I found out. First, where are we talking about? The oil sands are in Alberta, Canada, and the existing Keystone Pipeline starts in a town called Hardisty. Here are two existing and two proposed pipelines from the location of the oil sands.
Figure 1. Pipelines from the Alberta Oil Sands (orange sun). Existing pipelines are shown as solid lines, proposed pipelines are dashed lines. Current oil sands production is about 1.5 million barrels per day, and is projected to increase to 5 million barrels per day by 2020.
I read the AGW folks position papers, but unsurprisingly, their opposition fails to mention a few things about the situation.
First, it’s not like we’re not getting any “dirty oil” from Canada right now. The existing Keystone pipeline is currently delivering about 160,000,000 (160 million) barrels per year of the allegedly nasty stuff. So why are the AGW folks screaming as if they were “dirty oil” virgins? They’ve been burning it in their cars for the last few years, they have no plans to stop burning it in their cars, and now they’re bitching about it? Spare me.
Second, is the water use for oil sands extravagant? Survey says … no.
Figure 2. Life-cycle use of water to produce various kinds of liquid fuels, from CERA.
In addition, the oil sand operators are limited by law from using more than 2.2 percent of the Athabasca River Water. Typically they use less than 1%.
Third, what about CO2? Well for me, I could care less. But some folks think it’s important. In any case, here’s the facts, from the independent analysis firm CERA (Cambridge Energy Research Associates), in a report entitled “OIL SANDS, GREENHOUSE GASES, AND US OIL SUPPLY: GETTING THE NUMBERS RIGHT” It says:
Transportation fuels produced solely from oil sands result in well-to-wheels life-cycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions 5 to 15 percent higher than the average crude refined in the United States.
That’s all? Five to fifteen percent higher? That’s what this whole screaming match is about? And the emissions from the oil sands mining or in-situ extraction are dropping all the time. Here’s the most surprising thing I found out. We import lots and lots of oil from Mexico … and emissions from Canadian oil sand oil are only 1.5% higher than those from Mexican oil.
Fancy that … nobody is complaining about emissions from “clean” Mexican oil, but “dirty” Canadian oil emits a WHOLE PERCENT AND A HALF MORE CO2 than Mexican oil and folks start screaming … does this make sense to anyone? Do we think the opponents of the pipeline might have some other agenda than CO2?
Finally, the most telling point to me in all of this is that the Canadians are not going to sit on the oil. Either it will go to the US via the existing Keystone and perhaps the proposed Keystone XL extension pipeline … or it will go to Asia via the Kinder Morgan and perhaps the Northern Gateway pipeline. But either way, it will be extracted, it will go through a pipeline, and it will be burnt.
So the choice is not whether the extra 1.5% of CO2 from the Canadian oil sands is going to enter the atmosphere—that ship has sailed. Their whole “dirty oil” CO2 argument is meaningless, because whether the Keystone XL pipeline is built or not, the oil will be burnt.
The only choice is whether it is burnt in the US or in China … and anyone who thinks that the latter course will cause less real pollution, not CO2 but real unburnt hydrocarbon and black carbon pollution, anyone who thinks there will be less of those nasty things if the oil is burnt in China is definitely not paying attention.
We have an amazing chance right now to secure a long-term oil supply from a friendly next-door neighbor instead of a bunch of aggro folks in the Middle East. If James Hansen and his allies prevent us from doing that, I will call down curses on their heads in the name of his precious grandchildren that he’s always talking about. Here’s the pathetic size of the emissions they’re up in arms about—the total emissions from the Canadian oil sands are 0.1% (a tenth of a percent) of global GHG emissions … and the emissions will happen whether the Keystone XL pipeline is built or not. If Hansen sentences his grandkids to get their oil from the Middle East and watch China burning the Canadian oil, he’s done much, much, much more damage to his grandchildren’s prospects than anything that might come from the extra few percent of CO2, CO2 that will come from the oil sands in any case.
I say emissions “might come from” the oil because the industry folks say that within the decade, the CO2 emissions from the oil sands will be on a par with conventional oil. They have already reduced emissions by about 40% from 2000 to 2009, and the process continues apace. Given their record, I see no reason to doubt that they will get to parity.
So I can only conclude that Hansen and his charming associates are not really concerned about CO2, they have other reasons for wanting to reduce US energy use and are using the small and decreasing difference in emissions as an excuse.
Bottom line? For me, the benefits from building the XL pipeline are much, much larger than any predicted costs, so my cost-benefit analysis says build it. Build it well, of course, route it around sensitive areas as best as we know how, build it to the highest of standards, oil spills are a bad thing … but build it no matter what the AGW folks might be on about.
w.
PS – Actually, no, I won’t curse Hansen’s sorry carcass and pathetic actions and minions, that’s literary hyperbole. He’s doing a great job of cursing himself already, karma is a bitch, so there’s no need for me to gild the lily. The worst thing is, after all his concern about his grandkids, when they’re grown they’re likely to curse him if he is successful in making them depend on the Middle East for their oil.
[UPDATE] Someone pointed out that I had not adequately addressed the argument that there is great environmental danger from the proposed Keystone XL crossing the Ogallala Aquifer. The Aquifer supplies water to many of the plains states in the central US.
That might be a reasonable argument if there weren’t a host of pipelines that cross the Ogallala right now, including carrying Canadian crude. The aquifer is the irregular area in the central USA, colored blue.

Figure 3. US pipelines carrying crude oil from Canada (red), other imports (dotted), and domestic production (blue). SOURCE
There are a couple of pipelines carrying Canadian crude that are already crossing the aquifer.
Crude pipelines are not as big a problem over aquifers as refined products, since these are much thinner and seep and are carried by rain down to the aquifer much easier than is crude oil. Here are the refined pipelines crossing the Ogallala aquifer:
Figure 4. US pipelines carrying refined oil products. SOURCE
Note that these are only the major pipelines, there are a host of smaller ones as well. As you can see, the Ogallala Aquifer is already criss-crossed by all types of pipelines, carrying all kinds of crude and refined oil. If it were a huge environmental problem, we’d have known about it long ago.
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Well, as a Canadian, I’d sooner we moved all those Texas refineries to wonderful Canada, and not the raw product in the other direction:-)
So instead of “dirty” oil from a strong democracy and ally like Canada, Hansen and his travellers would prefer blood-soaked oil from scumbag terrorist-supporting dictatorships like Saudi Arabia?
Hugh Pepper, you are completely wrong. The rest of the world (except stupid Australia and Britain) is dropping “green” technologies like they had plague as energy prices rise unecessarily during economicly difficult times.
Hugh Pepper:
The rest of the world is doing what? Excuse me? Who freaking cares? But for sake of interest, what exactly do you think the “rest of the world” is doing?
Fair? What is “fair”? Are you in third grade? Still smarting from dodgeball?
I have to assume you’re reading challenged, since the alleged “threat to the water” is covered quite thoroughly. However, instead of actual numbers, you’ve simply made a broad, unsupported statement. Ridiculous. The one number you actually provide is so wildly wrong it could only come from the raging pen of a scaremongerer.
Not that I actually care, but what risks? You have not stated any. All you have done is express that you, like apparently millions of others, are incapable of critically evaluating information and instead believe someone else when they tell you a pipeline is unsafe.
The best comment I’ve seen about paper recycling is that the trees used are grown like a crop for the purpose, so “saving trees” is like saying, “Recycle your bread crumbs! Save the Wheat!”
Heh.
Willis:
I think there’s another factor you haven’t included. If the oil is going to China, the well-to-wheels calculations go up because of the added transportation from Canada to the Pacific rim. Plus, the environmental risk goes down if a pipeline is used instead of ships and trains. IIRC, the Alaskan pipeline was to have extended down to the contiguous US, but environmentalists blocked that and the ocean terminal was created. Hence the Exxon Valdez spill wouldn’t have happened if the pipeline had been allowed.
Re: caring, etc.
I’m definitely on the “couldn’t” side, but have come up with a great (even slangy) compromise:
“As if I could care less!”
I commend it to all.
🙂
Robert of Ottawa says:
October 6, 2011 at 12:52 pm
Well, as a Canadian, I’d sooner we moved all those Texas refineries to wonderful Canada, and not the raw product in the other direction:-)
Unfortunately your refinery equipment seems to be stuck somewhere between Idaho and Montana. The ‘mega-load’ thing is in worse shape then the pipeline thing.
http://www.boiseweekly.com/CityDesk/archives/2011/09/23/montana-judge-delays-mega-load-ruling-until-october
But W., I fear you stand revealed, nekked as a jaybird. Coming down on the side of “consensus grammar”, however crapulous! It’s shocked and saddened are we with standards of clarity and coherence.
>:-p
I sure am glad I live in an area where I don’t need heat during Winter.
Martin Brumby says:
October 6, 2011 at 10:56 am
“I hazard a guess that Hansen wont be paying for his air fare or his accommodation. I doubt that the Royal Society will pick up the tab. So it is likely to be the taxpayer, either here in the UK or you lot in the USA. And is he using his holiday allowance, or had he been given paid leave?”
“Anyone know?”
—
I don’t know who is paying his way (he has considerable means, so a trip like this is no big deal relative to his personal wealth).
However, isn’t it interesting that when he needs to transport himself somewhere across the globe, “dirty” petroleum is there to make his planes fly and his transportation cars operate safely?
I really think that these people need to STOP USING ALL PETROLEUM PRODUCTS. PERIOD. TODAY. Not doing so is just utter hypocrisy…
Paul H
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/10/06/the-only-choice-is-where-it-gets-burned/#comment-761017
I posted this in tips and notes, but it has since been cleaned. Hooray!
According to Dr. Suzuki, all fossil fuels are unethical, because burning them causes global warming.
David Suzuki: Is oil from Alberta’s tar sands ethical?
http://www.straight.com/article-478056/vancouver/david-suzuki-oil-albertas-tar-sands-ethical
And a rebuttal from Ethical Oil
David Suzuki’s moral relativism on the ethics of oil
http://www.calgaryherald.com/story_print.html?id=5506222&sponsor=
@Galane says:
October 6, 2011 at 4:09 am
Build the bloody pipeline, but instead of wasting money running it wayyyy over and down to the southern shore of Texas, build a refinery in Idaho and pipe the oil a much shorter nearly straight shot south.
————-
Not only that but it’s a lot more efficient to pump refined products through a pipeline than tar.
The real travesty is that we (Canadians) will not be shipping oil/crude down south but the bitumen. The bitumen is mixed with diesel and send down, then once extracted the diesel is sent back up in the loop. So, instead of selling oil/crude at over $100 a barrel, we will be selling the bitumen for about $10. Canada is getting screwed again and our resources ransacked. We should be sending the bitumen to the east and make fuel that we can sell at huge profits.
Willis: I could care less.
You are correct.
It is an irony: a locution whose meaning is the opposite of the literal interpretation, and it always has been. When spoken, the tone of voice communicates the irony.
Alternatives are “Like I could care less”, “Do you think I could care less?”, and “I could care less –NOT!”
Nothing is more tedious than the slings and arrows of misguided pedants — the proud man’s contumely when he is utterly wrong.
You have my sympathy for tolerating us.
Robert of Ottowa: The rest of the world (except stupid Australia and Britain) is dropping “green” technologies like they had plague as energy prices rise unecessarily during economicly difficult times.
Solar, wind and biofuels R&D and installation are expanding worldwide. The rate fluctuates, but no one is “dropping” them. All energies have their problems: solar is diffuse and limited to daylight, but petroleum is a long way away from where most people live, and growing demand has driven up the price, and probably will continue to. Sure the alternatives have subsidies, but we pay our military to protect the tankers — without military protection, the pirates would capture all of them.
TBear (Warm Cave in Cold-as-Snow-Sydney) says:
October 6, 2011 at 2:22 am
Good analysis, but let’s leave the grandchildren – of Hansen or whoever – out of it.
==================================================================
That would be possible if the ‘warmista’ would stop invoking the, “do it for the children” tug on emotion. Our resistance here in Australia is “for the children” … in fact, to give them a future economic prosperity to look forward to. I am appalled at the level of AGW indoctrination of children in Australian schools by the (socialist) educationalists.
Hanson should not invoke his grandchildren as a cause or they too will become embroiled in his deception.
“Not only that but it’s a lot more efficient to pump refined products through a pipeline than tar.”
Not really. First it’s not TAR. 2nd, refine the crude and you have many different products, which would require a separate line for each instead of one big line. You’d need 6 smaller pipelines instead of one.
“build a refinery in Idaho” The NIMBY’s and environmental assessment process, let alone the actual cost of the refinery, would cost multiple billions and take 25 years to complete. Why bother when the capacity already exists?
Willis-
Thanks for a great post on something, the approval of which, in earlier times, would have been a no-brainer. But to the eco-nuts (I refuse to call them environmentalist. I’m an environmentalist) anything to do with oil is bad and they oppose it. You would think that this is only pipeline bringing Alberta oil sand products to the U.S. Not so. In addition to the existing TransCanada Pipeline, there are several others. See this site:
http://www.cepa.com/map/pdf/liquids-pipelines.pdf
You covered the water use and CO2 arguments well. Their other main argument is that it goes over a portion of the Ogallala aquifer in eastern Nebraska. So a spill would contaminate the aquifer. This is highly unlikely since the Ogallala doesn’t recharge in that area very fast. Also, the water flow is from West to East so anything getting into the aquifer would not promulgate to the west. Pumping water out of it has been called “mining paleowater.” For the Wikipedia article on the Ogallala see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogallala_Aquifer
Note also that a U.S. State Deparement study found that the route of the Keystone XL pipeline would be unlikely to have significant environmental impacts.
Septic Matthew says:
October 6, 2011 at 4:22 pm
No, “green” technologies are not expanding “worldwide”. They are expanding where the local government subsidizes them, or requires them (ethanol), or does both.
But when the subsidies dry up, so do the installations.
Germany is cutting back, and Spain has dropped subsidies entirely. The article about Spain says:
Spain’s experience should have been a wake-up call for those pushing solar … but as you have just proven, not everyone woke up. Bloomberg News says:
As always, it’s subsidy driven.
We pay our military to protect all ships at sea, from tankers to those carrying solar panels from China and wind turbines from Germany. So that subsidy is across the board, everyone enjoys it, not just oil.
So if the world is not “dropping green technologies” as you claim, Matthew … then why is the “demand for solar panels plummeting”? Why are solar sales dropping for the first time?
Easy answer … subsidies, and the lack thereof.
Or we could look at the use of ethanol in fuel. The huge “success” story on this one is Brazil. Here’s the latest news from the south:Oops, Brazil is dropping ethanol, just like Robert said[DELETED, old article, didn’t notice. – w.] … or we could look at wind power. From the Guardian:Oooops …
I could find dozens and dozens of examples, but that should serve. So I’d say Robert is right. Subsidies for alternative energy are falling all over the world, and installations of so-called “green” technologies are falling in lockstep.
w.
Jurg Burg says:
October 6, 2011 at 6:13 am
Thanks, Jurg. You are right that it is not a given that a pipeline will be built to the west. But I doubt very much if the oil will just stay in the ground. There’s too many dollars, and too many jobs, for that to happen.
Regarding your comment on Suzuki and the “native groups”, you underestimate the pipeline folks. The Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline folks say:
Given the jobs and the money involved, and the generally poor job opportunities and sluggish economy in that part of the world, I suspect that there will be a whole lot of local support for the pipeline (along with the inevitable protests you speak of.)
w.
Willis,.
Your conclusion that after all the BS is debunked that the ulterior motivation becomes clearer resonates with me. This should be a focus of attention in examination of the CAGW propaganda, i.e. can we see the motivation that is not relevant to the science shining through the spin? It is likely to be the most successful in creating discomfort…..
Ken
old engineer says:
October 6, 2011 at 5:33 pm
That might be a reasonable argument if there weren’t a host of pipelines that cross the Ogallala right now, including carrying Canadian crude. The aquifer is the irregular area in the central USA, colored blue.


Crude pipelines are not as big a problem over aquifers as refined products, since these are much thinner and seep and are carried by rain down to the aquifer much easier than is crude oil. Here’s the refined pipelines crossing the Ogallala aquifer:
As you can see, the Ogallala Aquifer is crisscrossed by pipelines …
w.
meanwhile we (the US) import oil from nations who harbor terrorists and nobody protests that.
Willis,
Excellent post. However, one article you referenced in a response; “Brazil Moves to Cut Back Its Pioneering Alcohol Fuel Program June 17, 1989|WILLIAM R. LONG | Times Staff Writer”, does appear to be from the LA Times, in the year 1989. Not exactly the latest news from the south.