White House Watch

Biden’s Decision To Kill Keystone XL Has Come Back To Haunt Him: REPORT

The Biden administration is reportedly planning to boost imports of Canadian oil, but won’t consider restarting construction of the Keystone XL pipeline.

The administration hasn’t yet decided on a plan and discussions are ongoing, people familiar with White House deliberations told The Wall Street Journal. But any uptick in oil imports from Canada would require additional reliance on rail, an already expensive way to transport oil, or boosted flows in existing pipelines which are already running near maximum capacity.

“There’s not a limitation in terms of resource potential,” Kevin Birn, an analyst at S&P Global Commodity Insights, told the WSJ. “There’s a limitation of capacity.”

Keystone XL, the proposed extension of an already operating pipeline, would have transported an additional 830,000 barrels of oil from western Canada to the U.S., according to TC Energy, the company that would have operated it. President Joe Biden canceled the pipeline’s permit hours after his inauguration on Jan. 20, 2021.

The White House, though, has repeatedly argued that bringing the pipeline back wouldn’t help relieve current global energy supply issues. Western nations have announced a series of sanctions targeting the Russian economy in the wake of the nation’s invasion of Ukraine, upsetting global energy markets in which Russia is a major player.

“The Keystone was not an oilfield; it’s a pipeline,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said during a press briefing in March.

TC Energy officially terminated the Keystone XL project in June following a review of its options. The pipeline was only 8% constructed when its permit was revoked, according to Reuters, but TC Energy had planned to complete it by 2023.

In January, a federal judge tossed a lawsuit filed by more than 20 states arguing that Biden had overstepped his constitutional authority when he revoked the permit. The judge ruled that he couldn’t determine whether Biden’s actions were legal since TC Energy had backed out of the project.

“Recent events have made it clear that we need more, not less, domestic energy supply,” Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen, who led the multi-state lawsuit, told the Daily Caller News Foundation in a statement following the ruling. “The Keystone XL or a similar pipeline could have provided that. Instead, Montanans are once again paying the price for President Biden’s disastrous energy policies that pander to his coastal elite base without even a perceived environmental benefit.”

In 2021, Canada was the largest foreign provider of crude oil to the U.S., government data showed. The U.S. imported more than 3.5 million barrels of Canadian oil per day last year.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org

Thomas Catenacci

Share
Published by
Thomas Catenacci

Recent Posts

Medal of Honor Monday: Army Pvt. Elden Harvey Johnson

Army Pvt. Elden Harvey Johnson fought in the 1944 Italian Campaign of World War II…

6 minutes ago

President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Monday, June 28, 2026

Schedule Summary: President Donald Trump will have executive time, hold several policy meetings, and sign…

14 hours ago

The 10-Minute ‘Cool Down Your House’ Reset

There comes a point every summer evening when the house starts behaving like it's hosting…

14 hours ago

Golf: The Scoring Method is Hard to Quit – for the Wrong Reasons

As a golfer, I often try different coaching/learning plans to see if it improves my…

21 hours ago

Mike Johnson Signals House Will Forge Ahead After GOP Holdouts Threatened Obstruction Of Votes

House Speaker Mike Johnson told “Sunday Morning Futures” host Maria Bartiromo that the House of…

1 day ago