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10-areas-across-country-Sinclair-meddling-midterms.png

Melissa Joskow / Media Matters

Sinclair dismisses environmental threats of the canceled Keystone XL Pipeline, pushes long-debunked claim that it would create thousands of jobs

Special Programs Climate & Energy

Written by Zachary Pleat & Allison Fisher

Published 01/22/21 4:32 PM EST

After President Joe Biden removed the permit of the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline, Sinclair Broadcast Group correspondent James Rosen aired a report in which he pushed false fossil fuel industry talking points about the job loss and environmental impact of the decision. Rosen's report aired on at least 54 Sinclair-owned or -operated local TV stations in 36 states, including Montana, South Dakota, and Nebraska, where the pipeline was planned to be built.

The segment attempted to appear fair by including “both sides” of the argument. It featured a representative of the American Petroleum Institute, Frank Macchiarola, who echoed the usual claim saying that “this project would provide 10,000 jobs directly.” Sinclair is among the many conservatives outlets pushing this misleading claim, which was debunked years ago. In fact, Rosen’s report also featured Jane Kleeb, a longtime opponent of the project and the chair of the Nebraska Democratic Party, who once again debunked this narrative, saying that the actual figure was close to “600 construction jobs,” in which workers would “travel with the pipeline from state to state. And about 10% of those jobs go to local folks within our state.”

Sinclair also failed to characterize the breadth of environmental threats and environmental justice issues from the project, including threats to drinking water sources of indigenous communities whose land the pipeline would intersect. Instead, Rosen noted that transporting crude oil by pipeline is more environmentally sound than by rail, which is to say, an accident of a train carrying the oil would be worse for the environment than a leaking oil pipeline. Rosen also failed to mention that the Keystone pipeline -- a separate pipeline from the same company which has already been in use -- has seen 21 documented oil spills and leaks, including some that leaked hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil and other toxic materials. Also absent from the coverage was the cost to the economy and jobs from the climate crises, which would be exacerbated by the burning of oil extracted from the Alberta Tar Sands. 

Video file

Citation

From a Sinclair segment airing during the January 21, 2021, edition of KTVO News at 6

JAMES ROSEN (SINCLAIR NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT): At his Senate confirmation hearing Thursday, transportation secretary nominee Pete Buttigieg defended President Biden's issuance of an executive order on his first day in office revoking federal permitting for the Keystone XL oil pipeline. 

(VIDEO BEGINS)

SEN. DAN SULLIVAN (R-AK): Do you think that decision is going to impact climate at all, to kill the Keystone Pipeline and kill thousands of jobs? 

PETE BUTTIGIEG (TRANSPORTATION SECRETARY NOMINEE): On that, more good-paying union jobs will be created in the context of the climate and infrastructure work that we have before us than has been impacted by other decisions. 

(VIDEO ENDS)

ROSEN: Designed to parallel the existing Keystone Pipeline, Keystone XL would stretch 1,200 miles, pumping 35 million gallons of crude oil a day from Canada to Nebraska.

…

ROSEN: President Obama blocked the pipeline in 2015, a mere seven years into development. Four years ago President Trump reinstated approval. Proponents have argued pipelines are environmentally safer than rail transport, and Keystone XL has strong support from traditionally Democratic unions. … Blasting President Biden's decision in statements this week were the Laborers’ International Union of North America, North America's Building Trades Unions, and the United Association of Union Plumbers and Pipefitters, with labor leaders charging Mr. Biden just cost the country 10,000 jobs and $2.2 billion in workers’ wages. 

(VIDEO BEGINS)

FRANK MACCHIAROLA (SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, AMERICAN PETROLEUM INSTITUTE): We contend that this project would provide 10,000 jobs directly, 2,000 jobs immediately working on the project. 

(VIDEO ENDS)

ROSEN: Nebraska Democratic Party chair Jane Kleeb has spent more than a decade battling against the Keystone XL on environmental grounds. 

(VIDEO BEGINS)

JANE KLEEB (BOLD NEBRASKA FOUNDER): TransCanada and lots of Republican politicians really lied to the American people about the job numbers. They started at a million and went down to 10,000. At county boards needing to get permits, they’re more honest about what the numbers really are, which is 600 construction jobs. They travel with the pipeline from state to state. And about 10% of those jobs go to local folks within our state. 

(VIDEO ENDS)

ROSEN: For all the controversy over this proposed pipeline over the last decade, actual construction has only progressed into northern Montana, just over the Canadian border.

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In This Article

  • Sinclair

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  • James Rosen

    James Rosen

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