Obama Won't Be Rushed Into Keystone Pipeline Decision

International Business Times

Published Feb 03, 2014 08:30AM ET

Updated Feb 03, 2014 09:00AM ET

By Meagan Clark - President Barack Obama will wait at least 90 days to decide whether to approve the Keystone XL pipeline, a Wall Street analyst says, after the State Department released a report Friday that concludes the oil transport project wouldn't significantly increase carbon pollution, one of Obama's main concerns.

Obama said last summer he would not approve the 1,700-mile pipeline if it would “significantly exacerbate” the problem of greenhouse gas emissions and global climate change.

The White House said Sunday the delay will allow the president to receive vital input from other government departments and agencies.

Some industry analysts believe the president will avoid making a decision until after the U.S. mid-term elections in November in order to avoid alienating Democratic voters.

“A final decision isn’t expected until this summer and could well occur after November’s congressional election,” Kevin Hebner of JP Morgan Chase Bank in New York said Sunday in a research note.

The TransCanada Corp. pipeline would transport 830,000 barrels a day of asphalt from Canada’s oil sands and of light oil from North Dakota to refineries near Houston on the Gulf Coast. Environmentalists have protested the project, but Western oil producers want the pipeline built so they can access new markets. The State Department’s report also suggests if the pipeline is not built, oil would continue to be extracted at the same rate from Alberta and transported to the Gulf Coast by rail instead.