CALGARY - Since TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) first proposed the 1,897-kilometre Keystone XL pipeline, the project has been studied, stalled, slammed and hyped -- all amid political pressure from interests on all sides of the debate. Some key dates in Keystone XL's history:
July 2008: TransCanada and ConocoPhillips, joint owners of the Keystone Pipeline, propose a major expansion to the network dubbed Keystone XL to carry oilsands bitumen from Alberta to Texas.
2009: As the U.S. State Department wades through comments based on an environmental assessment of the project, TransCanada starts visiting landowners potentially affected by the pipeline. Opposition emerges in Nebraska.
June 2009: TransCanada announces it will buy ConocoPhillips's stake in Keystone.
March 2010: The Canada's National Energy Board approves TransCanada's application for Keystone XL, though the OK comes with 22 conditions regarding safety, environmental protection and landowner rights.
April 2010: The U.S. State Department releases a draft environmental impact statement saying Keystone XL would have a limited effect on the environment.
June-July 2010: Opposition to Keystone XL begins mounting in the United States. Legislators write to then-secretary of state Hillary Clinton calling for greater environmental oversight; scientists begin speaking out against the project; and the Environmental Protection Agency questions the need for the pipeline extension.
July 2010: The State Department extends its review of Keystone, saying federal agencies need more time to weigh in before a final environmental impact assessment can be released.
The State Department releases its final environmental assessment, which reiterates that the pipeline would have a limited environmental impact.
Protesters stage a two-week campaign of civil disobedience at the White House to speak out against Keystone XL. Police arrest approximately 1,000 people, including actors Margot Kidder and Daryl Hannah as well as Canadian activist Naomi Klein.
At a demonstration on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, police arrest 117 of 400 protesters.
The State Department says TransCanada must reroute Keystone XL to avoid an ecologically sensitive region of Nebraska.
TransCanada agrees to reroute the line.
U.S. legislators pass a bill with a provision saying President Barack Obama must make a decision on the pipeline's future in the next 60 days.
Obama rejects Keystone, saying the timeline imposed by the December bill did not leave enough time to review the new route. Obama says TransCanada is free to submit another application.
Feb. 27, 2012: TransCanada says it will build the southern leg of Keystone XL, from Cushing, Okla., to the Gulf Coast, as a separate project. This is not subject to presidential permission, since it does not cross an international border.
TransCanada submits a new route to officials in Nebraska for approval.
TransCanada files a new application with the State Department for the northern part of Keystone XL.
Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman approves TransCanada's proposed new route for Keystone XL, sending the project back to the State Department for review.
January 2013: Pipeline opponents file a lawsuit against the Nebraska government claiming the state law used to review the new route is unconstitutional.
The State Department says in a report that Keystone XL would produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions than transporting oil to the Gulf of Mexico by rail.
A Nebraska judge rules that the law that allowed the governor to approve Keystone XL over the objections of landowners was unconstitutional. Nebraska says it will appeal.
The State Department suspends the regulatory process indefinitely, citing uncertainty about the court case in Nebraska.
TransCanada says the costs of Keystone XL have grown to US$8 billion from US$5.4 billion.
Midterm elections turn control of the U.S. Congress over to Republicans, who say they'll make acceptance of Keystone XL a top priority. But Obama adopts an increasingly negative tone.
: At Nebraska Supreme Court, by the narrowest of margins, a panel of seven judges strikes down the lower-court decision.
: The U.S. Senate approves a bill to build Keystone XL, but the White House says Obama would veto it.
Feb. 24, 2015: Obama vetoes the bill.
: TransCanada writes to then-secretary of state John Kerry and other U.S. officials saying the State Department should include recent climate change policy announcements by the Alberta and federal governments in its review of Keystone XL.
: TransCanada asks the U.S. government to temporarily suspend its application.
: The U.S. government rejects that request.
: The Obama administration rejects TransCanada's application to build the Keystone XL pipeline. TransCanada CEO Russ Girling says he is disappointed, but continues to believe the project is in the best interests of both Canada and the U.S.
: TransCanada files notice to launch a claim under Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement, alleging the U.S. government breached its legal commitments under NAFTA.
: Republican presidential contender Donald Trump says he would approve Keystone XL if elected, a promise he repeats several times during the campaign.
Nov. 8, 2016: Trump elected president.
: Trump signs executive order that he says approves Keystone XL, but he also suggests the U.S. intends to renegotiate the terms of the project. He also signs an order requiring American pipelines to be built with U.S. steel.
: TransCanada submits new presidential permit application.
: The White House says Keystone XL won't use American steel because the pipeline is already under construction and Trump's presidential directive applies to new pipelines or those under repair.
: U.S. State Department grants presidential permit for Keystone XL. TransCanada discontinues its NAFTA challenge.