State Dept Keystone Review Assumes 'Global Failure to Address Climate Change'

InsideClimate News 2014-03-07

Summary:

Environmental groups tell State Dept that assumptions made in its Keystone review could 'undermine the nation’s credibility' during UN climate talks.

By John H. Cushman Jr.

As the deadline for public comment on the Keystone XL pipeline arrived on Mar. 7, environmental groups told the Obama administration that the State Department's analysis of the project was based on flawed assumptions that clash with the nation's commitment to mobilizing global action against climate change.

In its final environmental impact statement (EIS) issued on Jan. 31, the State Department asserted that no single project would have much effect on the growth of Canada's tar sands industry. It based its conclusions partly on business-as-usual projections that demand for oil and prices would rise amid continued worldwide inaction on global warming.

The Natural Resources Defense Council said in wide-ranging comments that the EIS "makes a fundamental error by relying on energy consumption scenarios which assume a global failure to address climate change."

If the State Department stuck with its predictions that energy consumption and prices were destined to remain high, it would "undermine the nation's credibility" during United Nations talks aimed at heading off the worst effects of global warming, the advocacy group said.

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Link:

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/solveclimate/blog/~3/t1AnrIyPtWk/state-dept-keystone-review-assumes-global-failure-address-climate-change

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Tags:

Authors:

John H. Cushman Jr.

Date tagged:

03/07/2014, 16:00

Date published:

03/07/2014, 13:30