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Koch Brothers Are Largest U.S. Lease-Holders In Oilsands

Koch Brothers OwnOf The Oilsands?
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AP

The Koch brothers, owners of the U.S.’s largest privately held company and major supporters of the Tea Party movement, are the single largest U.S. leaseholders in Alberta’s oilsands, controlling an area nearly the size of Delaware.

But they don’t appear to be using the land, a fact that — depending on where you stand — means either the Kochs have nothing to gain from oilsands expansion, or are waiting with bated breath for the Keystone XL pipeline to start flowing.

Charles and David Koch have been major contributors to — some would say architects of — the U.S. Tea Party movement, whose Republican adherents in Congress are among the most vocal supporters of the Keystone XL pipeline. Tea Party Republicans have repeatedly attempted to link budget agreements to approval of the pipeline.

According to research carried out by the left-leaning International Forum on Globalization and confirmed by the Washington Post, Koch Oil Sands Operating (KOSO) controls 1.1 million acres in the oilsands, the single largest patch of land held by a U.S. firm. KOSO is a subsidiary of Koch Industries, which is the U.S.’s largest privately held company, with annual revenues of around $115 billion.

But the Washington Post, citing “industry sources familiar with oil sands leases,” says the Kochs’ acreage could be nearly double that, at around 2 million acres.

That’s considerably more than any other U.S. oilsands operator; Conoco holds roughly 900,000 acres and ExxonMobil has some 700,000. And it’s more than many major Canadian operators, such as CNRL (115,000 acres) and Syncrude (250,000 acres), though Cenovus holds 1.5 million acres.

But, as the IFG report notes, the Koch brothers are not major producers in the oilsands.

However if the Kochs are planning on riding the Keystone to fortune, they’re not making the necessary moves. So far, KOSO has not reserved any space on the pipeline, the Post notes.

An earlier report from the IFG estimated that the oilsands could generate as much as $100 billion in profit for the Koch brothers, whose combined net worth is estimated at some $80 billion.

The Kochs’ political influence in the U.S. is well documented; they are, among other things, founding members of the political lobby group Americans for Prosperity, which lobbied aggressively against Obamacare and opposes most proposed climate initiatives and regulations.

But their influence extends north of the border as well. The Fraser Institute, a right-libertarian think tank that enjoys tax-free status as a charity, has taken hundreds of thousands of dollars of Koch money.

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Celebs Against The Oilsands
Singer Diana Krall(01 of16)
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Diana Krall was the second act on Neil Young's Honour the Treaties tour. (credit:AP)
Actress Neve Campbell(02 of16)
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Rocker Neil Young(03 of16)
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(credit:AP)
Actress Daryl Hannah(04 of16)
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Musician Gord Downie(05 of16)
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Lead singer for the Tragically Hip (credit:Flickr:qmnonic)
Musician Jim Cuddy(06 of16)
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From Blue Rodeo (credit:AP)
Dr. David Suzuki(07 of16)
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(credit:Flickr:Caelie_Frampton)
Musician Sarah Harmer(08 of16)
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Canadian author and social activist Naomi Klein(09 of16)
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Fort McMurray, a.k.a. 'Oilsands City'(10 of16)
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(credit:Creative Commons: Tallgirl)
Stunning Population Growth(11 of16)
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Fort McMurray, Alberta, has seen its population grow from 926 in 1951, to more than 60,000 today -- a growth rate of 70,000 per cent over 60 years. The city grew by 14,000 people, or 29 per cent, in just the 2006 to 2011 period.Source: StatsCan (credit:HP)
Far More Men Than Women(12 of16)
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Whereas in Alberta in general there are approximately 99 to 104 men for every 100 women, in Fort McMurray, where male-dominated oil jobs dominate, that ratio is skewed well towards men. There are 110 to 140 men for every 100 women in Fort McMurray, depending on the neighbourhood.Source: Kevin CorreiaThis caption has been corrected from an earlier version. (credit:Alamy)
Arm And A Leg For Housing(13 of16)
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The average price of a two-bedroom apartment in April, 2011, was $2,152 -- comparable to major Canadian cities like Toronto and Vancouver. For those rates to be affordable, you'd need to earn at least $80,000 per year. But given that oil workers can earn as much as $120,000, that is, actually, affordable by Fort McMurray standards.Source: Wood Buffalo Regional Municipality (credit:CP / Globe and Mail)
Third Largest Oil Reserves In The World(14 of16)
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Fort McMurray sits at the centre of what is now recognized as the third-largest proven supply of oil in the world. Alberta has 170.8 billion barrels of oil in the ground, about 12 per cent of the world's total. By comparison, Saudi Arabia has 260 billion barrels, and Venezuela 211 billion. The oil sands' share of that total continues to grow, and with it, Fort McMurray's importance to the industry. The city is expected to quadruple in size, to about 231,000, within 20 years.Source: Government of Alberta (credit:CP)
Giant Job Machine(15 of16)
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There are 140,000 people employed in Alberta's oil and gas extraction industry -- a very large number, considering the province's total population of 3.6 million. In all, energy counts for 23.4 per cent of Alberta's economy.Source: Government of Alberta (credit:CP)
Now That's Cold(16 of16)
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Classified as a sub-Arctic zone, Fort McMurray is bitingly cold, even by Canadians' standards. The average night-time low in January is minus-24 Celsius, or minus-11 Fahrenheit, though the average daytime high in July does reach a decent 23 Celsius (73 Fahrenheit).Source: The Weather Network (credit:CP/Globe and Mail)

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