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U.S. media favored Keystone pipeline in coverage Jeremy Hance mongabay.com January 26, 2012 ![]() Around 12,000 protestors, including children, encircled the White House in November. A new report by Media Matters finds that the U.S. media largely ignored these protestors and their message. Photo by: Amy Dewan.
According to Media Matters, 79 percent of guests or quotes on broadcast news favored the pipeline, while 14 percent did not. NBC and ABC did not air any opposition voices. Cable coverage was skewed by 59 percent favoring the pipeline with 25 percent not in favor. In print it was 45 percent for the pipeline versus, 31 percent opposed. Environmental concerns received mostly cursory mention and the impact of the tar sands industry on climate change was barely mentioned (10 percent of cable coverage and 7 percent of broadcast news) even though that was the driving force behind many of the large-scale protests that occurred in the fall. These protests—which involved 1,253 people arrested in civil disobedience acts against the pipeline in August and 12,000 people surrounding the White House in November—were also little-mentioned in U.S. media. Furthermore, many news outlets inflated job figures based on what experts say is erroneous information from TransCanada. The State Department has estimated that between 5,000-6,000 jobs would be created by the pipeline, but the vast majority of these would be temporary. The $7 billion Keystone XL pipeline would have carried tar sands oil 1,700 miles from Canada through six U.S. states to Texas, crossing one of the U.S.'s most important freshwater sources, the Ogallala Aquifer. Reasons against the Keystone pipeline were many and varied, from oil spill impacts to indigenous issues. But for most activists, the largest issue was climate change as oil from the tar sands emits more carbon than conventional sources. Climatologist, James Hansen, has stated that if the full-extent of the tar sands are exploited along with the world's coal reserves "it is essentially game over" for the climate. Even as the Obama Administration has scrapped the project, it is leaving the door open for TransCanada to reapply with a different route. In the meantime, U.S. Republicans are working on legislation to push the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to grant a permit for the pipeline within 30 days. Politico reported today that TransCanada spent $1.33 million on lobbying last year.
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