Now that Hillary Clinton has come out against the Keystone XL pipeline, pressure is mounting on the White House to kill the project or risk undermining President Obama’s delicate, high-profile efforts to forge a global response to climate change.
The proposed $6 billion steel straw would double the flow of oil from Canada’s tar sands to U.S. refineries on the Gulf Coast. It would also tip the earth toward catastrophic global warming, activists say, and for that reason they’ve fought the project for more than a half-decade, growing increasingly frustrated with the tortured decision-making of former Secretary Clinton and President Obama.
But on Tuesday, Clinton at last took a stand against the pipeline, calling it “a distraction” and not “in the best interest of what we need to do to combat climate change.” That left Obama to take fire all alone.
RELATED: Hillary Clinton (finally) comes out against Keystone pipeline
“If Hillary Clinton can go from being ‘inclined to approve’ Keystone XL to ‘I oppose’ in five years, then surely Barack Obama can go from more than six years of indecision to outright rejection,” said Elijah Zarlin, the director of climate campaigns at CREDO, an online progressive group with more than 3 million members. “As someone who says he is committed to action on climate, it is long past time for President Obama to reject Keystone XL.”
The White House has said that Clinton’s decision would not influence its own, a position it reiterated to msnbc Tuesday evening. All Tuesday afternoon and evening, however, calls poured in from advocacy groups hoping to use Clinton’s rejection to prod President Obama.
“Now, as the opposition to Keystone XL mounts, the decision [to reject the pipeline] remains with the President,” said Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune. “He has all the evidence he needs to do just that and reject Keystone XL once and for all.”
Erich Pica, the president of Friends of the Earth Action, which has endorsed Clinton challenger Bernie Sanders, called the former secretary of state’s opposition “an important about-face.”
“Now is the time for President Obama to reject the pipeline outright,” Pica added.
No group helped put Keystone on the political map more than 350.org, founded by former journalist Bill McKibben. He turned what could have been a pro-forma permitting decision into a grand fight for the future of the planet, driven by his concept of “global warming’s terrifying math.” It comes down to three figures: 2 degrees Celsius, 565 gigatons, and 2,795 gigatons.
The first figure is the rise in global temperature that scientists consider to be safe. The second is the amount of carbon humans can pour into the atmosphere by mid-century and still have some reasonable hope of staying below two degrees. The third is the amount of carbon already in reserves around the world—an amount that is at least three times more than we can safely burn.








