National Post

Trump to reverse Obama green push

ORDER TUESDAY AIMED AT BOOSTING COAL, DOMESTIC OIL, NATURAL GAS

- Jennifer A. Dlouhy

President Donald Trump is set to sign a sweeping executive order on Tuesday aimed at promoting domestic oil, coal and natural gas by reversing much of his predecesso­r’s efforts to address climate change — prompting warnings the action will undermine U.S. leadership on the issue.

The document lays out a broad blueprint for the Trump administra­tion to dismantle the architectu­re that former president Barack Obama built to combat the phenomenon, according to details shared with Bloomberg News. Some of the changes would happen immediatel­y, while others would take years to complete.

“He’s trying to undo more than a decade of progress in fighting climate change and protecting public health,” David Doniger at the Natural Resources Defense Council said in an email. “But nobody voted to abandon America’s leadership in climate action and the cleanenerg­y revolution. This radical retreat will meet a great wall of opposition.”

The order will compel federal agencies to quickly identify any actions that could burden the production or use of domestic energy resources, including nuclear power, and then work to suspend, revise or rescind the policies unless they are legally mandated, are necessary for the public interest or promote developmen­t.

It also will toss out two Obama- era directives that gave considerat­ion of climate change a prominent role in federal rule- making. One advised government agencies to factor climate change into environmen­tal reviews, such as where oil drilling should take place. The other, called the “social cost of carbon,” is a metric reflecting the potential economic damage from climate change that was used by the Obama administra­tion to justify a suite of regulation­s.

“This is about making sure that we have a progrowth and pro- environmen­t approach to how we do regulation in this country,” Scott Pruitt, the head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, said on ABC’s This Week program on Sunday.

Trump, who has called climate change a hoax, has vowed to reorient the government so that U. S. oil and coal producers thrive and steel and auto manufactur­ers don’t face “job- killing restrictio­ns.” The coming order underscore­s Trump’s commitment to make good on his campaign promises, which helped propel him to victory in industrial strong- holds such as West Virginia and Pennsylvan­ia.

The details shared with Bloomberg News reflected the latest draft of the White House order and could change before the announceme­nt, which Pruitt said would happen Tuesday.

Some analysts question whether reversing the rules can save coalminer jobs. Killing the Clean Power Plan is not enough to spark a coal revival and avert a wave of planned retirement­s of power plants using the fossil fuel, said Kevin Book with Washington- based research firm ClearView Energy.

“Even without the Clean Power Plan, there are still 14 gigawatts of coal retirement­s related to” a mercury pollution rule “and market dynamics waiting in the wings,” Book said.

While the White House order will make clear that the target of the planned regulatory rollback should be on policies curbing the production of oil, natural gas, coal and nuclear energy, it also will say the U.S. is well served when affordable, reliable and clean electricit­y is produced from an array of sources, including solar, wind and hydro.

The order also is set to include a targeted assault on a handful of specific Obamaera regulation­s. It will require the Interior Department to lift a moratorium on the sale of new coal leases on federal land and compel the EPA to review, and, “if appropriat­e,” begin proceeding­s to suspend, revise or rescind regulation­s designed to re- duce greenhouse- gas emissions from power plants.

Obama’s Clean Power Plan was designed to cut carbon- dioxide emissions from electricit­y by 32 per cent by 2030 compared to 2005 levels. The initiative has been in legal limbo since the U. S. Supreme Court stayed it while it was reviewed by a federal appeals court. The Trump administra­tion now is expected ask that court to put the matter on hold to allow it time to revise or undo the measure — an action environmen­talists have vowed to challenge.

Other policies in t he crosshairs: an EPA rule setting requiremen­ts for greenhouse- gas emissions f or constructi­on of new power plants and an Interior Department regulation setting mandates on hydraulic fracturing of oil and gas wells on federal lands. The Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management said earlier this month it would begin the process to rescind the regulation, which requires companies to disclose the chemicals they pump undergroun­d and to seal off wastewater in storage tanks.

Trump’s executive order also is set to revoke six specific directives f rom his predecesso­r, including Obama’s broad strategy for paring emissions of methane released from oil and gas operations. Other Obama directives targeted for repeal include one on climate change and national security, as well as a pair of directives from June, 2013, that laid out his climate plans.

The Obama administra­tion wove climate considerat­ions into decisions across the f ederal bureaucrac­y, from efficiency standards for microwave ovens to the refurbishi­ng of government buildings.

The changes may have little immediate impact on the market for coal, which is facing stiff competitio­n from cheaper natural gas and renewable energy, analysts say.

Even before the Obama administra­tion imposed the coal- leasing moratorium in January, 2016, producers had little interest in adding new federal reserves to their portfolios amid slumping domestic demand. The U. S. government has sold just one coal lease since October, 2012, though earlier this month it approved a transactio­n originally sought in 2005. Existing federal leases contain at least 20 years’ worth of coal, according to Interior Department estimates.

Even without the EPA’s Clean Power Plan in force because of the Supreme Court stay, using coal to generate electricit­y has been in decline as a result of previous pollution regulation­s and competitio­n from low- cost natural gas, solar and wind.

Trump’s action sets in motion at least a year of bureaucrat­ic work at the EPA to formally dismantle the Clean Power Plan. And whatever happens will inevitably be challenged in court.

 ?? MICHAEL REYNOLDS / POOL / GETTY IMAGES ?? U. S. President Donald Trump signs an executive order March 13. On Tuesday, Trump plans to sign an order rolling back many of his predecesso­r Barack Obama’s climate initiative­s, including the Clean Power Plan.
MICHAEL REYNOLDS / POOL / GETTY IMAGES U. S. President Donald Trump signs an executive order March 13. On Tuesday, Trump plans to sign an order rolling back many of his predecesso­r Barack Obama’s climate initiative­s, including the Clean Power Plan.

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