Eco-Politics Back on The Ranch
It’s been a surprise story for the national media. During hearings held by the State Department this week, some of the loudest opposition to the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline, which will move tar-sands oil from Alberta to Texas refineries, is coming from Nebraska, a deep-red state whose citizens are often isolated from and a bit suspicious of federal politics.
We’ve become used to a political narrative that says conservatives aren’t interested in environmental issues—and certainly aren’t likely to join hands with greenies or raise Cain to fight the oil industry. But sometimes there’s a realpolitik in Nebraska that transcends conventional political ideologies—it’s about land and the practicalities of living on it.
Like most of the Plains, Nebraska has a lot of farmland and pasture—more than 90 percent of its land base is agricultural. State law banned corporations from owning farms from 1982 to 2006, when a federal court struck down the ban. But the vast majority of Nebraska’s farmland is still family-owned, and the pipeline crosses land that has belonged to some ranch families for several generations. The planned pipeline route also transects the Sandhills, an iconic 12-million-acre landscape of fragile sandy soil, rolling dunes, prairie grasses, yucca, and migrating waterbirds. “The Sandhills are Nebraska’s wild land. It’s this place where we still have our cattle ranching traditions. It's still a lot like it was 100 years ago,” says Ben Gotschall, a fourth-generation Nebraska rancher and one of lead campaigners against the Keystone XL pipeline.
The aquifer that runs through the Sandhills is so shallow that in some places locals say you can touch water just by digging your arm elbow-deep into the dirt. And it’s not just any groundwater, but the giant Ogallala Aquifer, which underlies eight states and supplies 65 percent of the nation’s irrigation water. After this summer’s highly publicized spill in Yellowstone River and several spills along TransCanada’s first Keystone pipeline, which runs from Canada to Illinois, locals are deeply concerned about what could happen to ranching communities when an oil leak hits the Sandhills’ shallow water table.
For many, the TransCanada route through the Sandhills feels like both an assault on the agricultural economy and on Nebraska’s very identity. “Our family has been in this ranching business and on this ranch for over a hundred years … and we were not going to stand by and in one fell swoop let TransCanada destroy it,” says Teri Taylor, one of many Nebraska landowners who testified this week against the pipeline at State Department hearings.
In total, more than 2,000 people turned out for the two Nebraska hearings. Roughly as many people showed up in the rural town of Atkinson, population 1,200, as in Lincoln, the capital city. At both hearings there was a crowd of pipeline supporters—many of whom were union workers hoping that TransCanada would offer construction jobs. According to InsideClimate News, the American Petroleum Institute offered many pipeline supporters bus transportation to the hearings. Union representatives also traveled to the hearings from out of state.
The hearings, though generally civil, sometimes had the feel of a football game. Pipeline opponents cheered enthusiastically for anti-Keystone testimony. Some claims about the pipeline’s safety standards got snickers. A union worker from Oklahoma won applause for an appeal about jobs that seemed to strike a chord. A soft-spoken rancher received a roar of approval from the crowd as he haltingly read testimony about his fears for the water supply. Multiple speakers voiced their anger over corporate influence in state and federal politics. “Why should we in Nebraska take all the risk for none of the benefits while a powerful corporation makes even more obscene profits?” said Jean Lewis, a Nebraska photographer.
Locals say it’s unusual for Nebraskans to react this strongly to anything—they say people here tend to be diffident, private, and uncomfortable when others meddle in their business. That may be one reason the project has roused such heated controversy. TransCanada’s public relations strategies have generally failed to comprehend Nebraskan sensibilities. The company stirred outrage when it sent threats of eminent domain to landowners along the pipeline. It aired ads about the pipeline on video screens earlier this month at Husker football games, a mainstay of Nebraska cultural life: Inside the 85,000-person stadium, the crowd booed when the ad appeared. Days after the second round of ads aired, the university canceled its contract with TransCanada because of fierce opposition from football fans.
Randy Thompson, who has fought to deny TransCanada rights to build the pipeline through his farm, was appalled when company representatives recently sent flowers to his mother’s funeral: “I said, ‘I want these in the dumpster right now.’ … That's the last thing I wanted to see at that time.”
For ranchers like Thompson, the pipeline fight has been eye-opening. It’s made political opponents into allies, uniting progressives concerned about climate change with conservative ranchers wanting to protect the integrity of their farmland and their water supplies.
The opposition has succeeded in getting the public’s attention in Nebraska. Three years ago, ranchers and environmentalists working against the pipeline believed it was a “done deal.” Now 64 percent of Nebraska voters support a regulatory proposal that could shift the pipeline route, and 47 percent oppose Keystone XL outright, according to a poll commissioned by Bold Nebraska. Public outcry has moved Governor Dave Heinemann, who was previously tepid on the subject, to ask Obama to deny approval to Keystone XL.
But what’s happening in Nebraska suggests something larger—that it could be possible to have environmental politics driven by common values rather than hot-button issues and divisive ideology. It’s not a partisan issue to protect drinking water. It’s common sense to find alternatives to importing expensive oil from Canada. And if farmers in the country’s breadbasket want to survive the decades to come, it will be necessary to stop climate change.
Politics in Nebraska will never look like California, but the pipeline has opened a back-to-basics dialogue in the center of the country about what people value and what they want for their children—such as a decent, unpolluted, stable place to live in.
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10 comments on "Eco-Politics Back on The Ranch"
October 03, 2011 8:43am
Why are we building a pipeline from Canada to Texas to refine oil that will be shipped to other countries? That makes no sense at all. Instead, why don't we simply build a refinery in Canada and sell refined oil in the states and Canada, so we can stop importing so much oil from the Middle East. This solves a few problems. No leaky pipeline that will displace farmers and possible destroy the water table, less imported oil from the Middle East, Construction jobs to build a new refinery and jobs to maintain it. More drivers to transport the oil to stations throughout the country. We already know that we need more refineries, so why not build one near the Tar Sands and forget this stinking XL pipeline?
October 02, 2011 8:22pm
"For ranchers like Thompson, the pipeline fight has been eye-opening. It’s made political opponents into allies, uniting progressives concerned about climate change with conservative ranchers wanting to protect the integrity of their farmland and their water supplies."
Another unlikely ally of the ranchers in this fight is the animal rights activist, who also values the land but cannot comprehend, given the current knowledge we have about the intelligence and emotions and harmlessness of these beautiful creatures, why any human being would want to kill them, just because it's a family tradition. "Strange bedfellows," indeed.
@Jane McKeel, I know "marine life" is a catch-all term, but I thought I'd clarify just who we're talking about: millions of sentient, sapient beings who love their lives and their land, their families and their friends. These inhabitants of the Canadian wilds are not just anonymous members of scientifically categorized species that fit into the entire ecosystem. No. They are each important individuals in their own right, just as we humans are. Each deserves to enjoy their time on earth to the fullest and not be obliterated -- and their homes and food supply wiped out -- just because there is money to be made.
October 02, 2011 4:42am
It's sad, but no matter what Nebraskans want big oil will do whatever it wants with its money and backing of the Supreme Court
October 02, 2011 3:32am
A picture (video) is worth a 1,000 words: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YkwoRivP17A. Here a petition to STOP THE PIPELINE: http://www.avaaz.org/en/obama_stop_the_tar_sands/?vlIf you haven't heard of the Transition Movement, a template for creating community resilience in the face of peak oil and climate change, here a talk by founder Rob Hopkins on TED which may foster some hope for the future: Video: (17:58)http://www.nextworldtv.com/page/4261.htmlThe question is, what do we really value?
October 02, 2011 9:00pm
Thanks for sharing these links. The first one is frightening. It has spurred me to attend the tar sands meeting my congressman is holding in his district office this week.
Avaaz: yes, I get these petitions. They're always important, and I love their international appeal.
Rob Hopkins: hadn't heard of him. He reminds me a bit of Zoe Weil's TEDx speech, "The World Becomes What You Teach." Zoe founded Institute for Humane Education. She calls on educators to teach students how to be "Solutionaries" in the same way Rob calls upon us to apply "resilience" to the challenges we face.
Again, thanks for expanding our education with these links.
October 01, 2011 6:09pm
I hope both of you are right in estimating what really motivates people, especially when it comes to NOT voting either Mr. Obama or a Repub candidate into the president's office in 2012.
October 01, 2011 5:55pm
Not only would the pipeline dangerously threaten the water supply in Nebraska and other states; but at the source of the oil, the environmental degradation caused by extraction would destroy forever a crucial ecosystem of marine life and habitat. Thousands of square miles of irrreplaceable pristine wildlands would be gone forever. This outrageous pipeline must be stopped on all counts. Why hasn't the public been brought into this discussion LONG before now??!
October 02, 2011 1:54pm
i totally agree with jane !
October 01, 2011 1:17pm
Nebraskans are learning - Stick together on the big things, the little ones will take care of themselves, at least they aren't front and center anymore.
NOW, if we could just get the rest of the country to get together to protect each other against the big banks, big oil, big business and those that support them. . . . . .
October 01, 2011 11:57am
The jobs would mostly be to out-of-state workers, and very temporary jobs even then. The oil would mostly be sold to Europe and Latin America, so the pipeline has more to do with making money for oil companies rather than importing oil. No new business can compete out of the gate against muscly businesses making obscene incomes. That's why green energy needs initial backing. But just let it grow a few % a year for a decade, and it will compete, and evolve. Oil people know that.