A majority of Americans favor pipelines and the intensity of that support is increasing, said AOPL President and CEO Andy Black during this wide-ranging discussion on pipeline safety, cybersecurity threats and what canceling a pipeline means for the environment.
Government reports show that pipelines are the safest mode of transportation of moving oil—and only getting safer.
However, these facts appear to largely have been ignored by the seemingly growing opposition to pipelines. Perhaps, there is no better example of this than the executive order made by President Joe Biden earlier this year revoking the Keystone XL pipeline permit—effectively killing the project.
“To me the Keystone XL—the cancellation of that—was the triumph of political interference over an exhaustive and unbiased review,” said Andy Black, president and CEO of the Association of Oil Pipe Lines (AOPL). “Americans lost access, affordability and opportunity and, ironically, the environment lost too because the Keystone XL pipeline alternative was the best option for the environment.”
Black, who leads AOPL’s mission to promote responsible government policies, safety excellence and public support for liquid pipelines, recently spoke with Cornerstone Government Affairs’ Jack Belcher for the latest installment of the Energy Policy Watch series on pipeline safety, cybersecurity threats, climate policy and more.
During the wide-ranging discussion, Black shared some impressive statistics from a recent AOPL survey showing that 70% of the American public has a favorable impression of pipelines. Further, the intensity of public support for pipelines in the U.S., according to Black, is increasing.
“There are a lot of loud voices in energy—particularly oil and gas right now. … We wanted to know what the American public really thinks and whether those loud voices represent the true feelings of the American public,” Black said about the survey.
“When people learn about pipelines, they are comfortable with them and we have support,” he later added.
The Association of Oil Pipe Lines (AOPL) represents pipelines transporting 97% of all hazardous liquids barrel miles reported to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). The group’s diverse membership includes large and small pipelines carrying crude oil, refined petroleum products, NGL and other liquids. Find out more at aopl.org.
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