With Keystone XL shot down by President Barack Obama, the Canadian energy industry — and its opponents — are turning their attention to the other options. Three pipelines proposed to carry rising oil-sands volumes from landlocked Alberta to Canada’s Pacific and Atlantic coasts face delays as activists, local communities and politicians attack their risks to the environment in a repeat of TransCanada Corp.’s seven-year saga seeking U.S. approval. Producers from Suncor Energy Inc. to Royal Dutch Shell Plc are banking on the alternatives. TransCanada is touting an even bigger line to Canada’s eastern shores, while Kinder Morgan Energy Inc. and Enbridge Inc. are aiming for routes to the country’s west coast. The headwinds they face are putting the long-term development of the world’s third-largest oil reserves at risk. “We’re working hard with stakeholders, and we intend to act decisively to increase the likelihood of getting our product to tidewater,” […]