Log in to hire Alec

Alec Jacobson

Photographer, Writer
    
Location: Burlington, Vermont, USA
Nationality: American
Biography: Alec Jacobson is a photographer and writer based in Vancouver, British Columbia, who likes to dive deep into slow-moving stories.  Drawing on his studies in Anthropology, French and Arabic at Amherst College, he prefers to be the only... MORE
Media News
I Wrote A Story for National Geographic
alec jacobson
Feb 10, 2021
I wrote a story for National Geographic about what will happen next with the Keystone XL pipeline now that President Biden has rescinded the permit. I’m so glad to see it paired with stunning images by Amber Bracken, Sara Hylton and Laurence Butet-Roch.

The result of a decade of stop-and-go progress is a patchwork of infrastructure strung over almost that entire route, from the starting point in Hardisty, Alberta, where a pumping station was completed in December, to the junction in Steele City, Nebraska, where the XL is supposed to join the existing Keystone pipeline that already runs to Texas. There are now more than 90 miles of Keystone XL pipe in the ground, a string of temporary work camps under construction, and roughly 48,000 tons of pipe sitting in yards all along the route. There is also a less material but still valuable asset: a chain of perpetual land easements, laboriously assembled by TC Energy lawyers, stretching nearly the entire length of the route.

“It’s just like when you have a cut on your arm and then when it heals you get a bit of a scar and it doesn’t really hurt your arm or anything. It’s just sort of an appearance thing. It’s sort of the same way on prairie land. It’s just that it was disturbed and put back,” Carol Hern said, describing the project. 

Others, however, see harm that is deeper than the surface level scar. Follow the link in my bio to read the story.


The Keystone XL pipeline is dead. Now what?
The Keystone XL may never move any oil, but its impact will still linger in the form of the pipes, worker camps, and other assets stranded along its 1,200-mile path.
LinkedIn Icon Facebook Icon Twitter Icon
2,115

Also by Alec Jacobson —

Media News

Connections to Kith and Kin - The Globe and Mail

Alec Jacobson / Vancouver
News

A-1, The Globe and Mail

Alec Jacobson / Array
Media News

Featured in Dodho Magazine

Alec Jacobson
Media News

'Zombie' Oil Wells For The New York Times

Alec Jacobson / Alberta, Canada
News

Outtake From My Everesting Story Runs in The Times

Alec Jacobson
Media News

Everesting for The New York Times

Alec Jacobson / Vancouver, BC
Media News

Romanza Gym in Athleta Magazine

Alec Jacobson
Media

My First Photo In National Geographic Magazine

Alec Jacobson
Events News

Langara Photography Masters Lecture

Alec Jacobson / Vancouver, BC
News

Heading South for The Globe and Mail

Alec Jacobson / Array
News

Vancouver Climate Strike

Alec Jacobson / vancouver
News

The American Scholar: Works in Progress - Heritage Ranching

Alec Jacobson / Pueblo, Colorado
Spotlight

National Geographic: Fishermen fight to survive on the world's second largest lake

Alec Jacobson / Uganda
News

National Geographic Travler: Peruvian Palate

Alec Jacobson / cusco, peru
I Wrote A Story for National Geographic by Alec Jacobson
Sign-up for
For more access