Winnipeg Free Press By: The Canadian Press Save to Read Later
July 2008: TC Energy Corp. then called TransCanada Corp. and ConocoPhillips, joint owners of the Keystone Pipeline, propose a major extension to the network. The expansion, dubbed Keystone XL, would carry hundreds of thousands of barrels of oilsands bitumen from Alberta to Texas.
A yard in Gascoyne, ND., which has hundreds of kilometres of pipes stacked inside it are shown shown on April 22, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Alex Panetta
July 2008: TC Energy Corp. then called TransCanada Corp. and ConocoPhillips, joint owners of the Keystone Pipeline, propose a major extension to the network. The expansion, dubbed Keystone XL, would carry hundreds of thousands of barrels of oilsands bitumen from Alberta to Texas.
A timeline of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline project
Poll
yes
By The Canadian Press on June 9, 2021.
A yard in Gascoyne, ND., which has hundreds of kilometres of pipes stacked inside it are shown shown on April 22, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Alex Panetta
July 2008: TC Energy Corp. – then called TransCanada Corp. – and ConocoPhillips, joint owners of the Keystone Pipeline, propose a major extension to the network. The expansion, dubbed Keystone XL, would carry hundreds of thousands of barrels of oilsands bitumen from Alberta to Texas.
2009: As the U.S. State Department wades through comments based on an environmental assessment of the project, TransCanada starts visiting landowners potentially affected by the pipeline. Opposition emerges in Nebraska.