
"South Bow, which was set up by former Keystone XL proponent TC Energy in 2024 to take over its oil pipeline business, is considering reviving some of the line that was already built in Alberta and already has all necessary Canadian permits."
"Bridger Pipeline, recently filed a proposal with Montana regulators that describes the construction of a 1,038-kilometre pipeline—capable of transporting up to 550,000 barrels per day—beginning near the U.S.-Canada border in Phillips County, Montana, and transiting to Guernsey, Wyoming."
"Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney brought up the pipeline's revival in a conversation with Trump in October, and it could provide him leverage in upcoming negotiations around renewing the Canada-U.S.-Mexico (CUSMA) trade agreement."
South Bow, a company formed by TC Energy in 2024, proposes reviving portions of the cancelled Keystone XL pipeline using a different U.S. route than the original project. The proposal involves constructing a 1,038-kilometre pipeline capable of transporting 550,000 barrels per day from Montana to Wyoming. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney discussed the revival with President Trump in October as potential leverage in CUSMA trade negotiations. Additional pipeline links to major U.S. refining hubs would be necessary to complete the project. The original Keystone XL was cancelled by President Biden in 2021 following Indigenous and environmental opposition. Trump's support could facilitate approval, as U.S. refiners depend heavily on Canada's 4.4 million barrels per day of oil exports.
Read at www.cbc.ca
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