China Daily (Hong Kong)

Trump lessening supervisio­n of energy sectors

- THE REPUBLICAN-LED US CONGRESS

has killed a US securities disclosure rule aimed at curbing corruption at big oil, gas and mining companies by requiring them to publicly state the taxes and fees they pay to government­s. Thepaper.cn commented on Sunday:

Approved last June, the US Securities and Exchange Commission’s “extraction rule” requires oil, gas, mining and other companies to make public the taxes and other fees they pay local government­s.

That is not to say, of course, US oil enterprise­s will be free to bribe foreign officials. But by calling the extraction rule “burdensome and costly” for energy companies and seeking to put it to rest, the Donald Trump administra­tion is step-by-step lessening the anti-corruption supervisio­n on overseas oil and gas companies.

That points to the fact that Trump is not shy of shirking global commitment­s long upheld by his predecesso­rs.

His “America First” approach and opportunis­t nature will greatly alter US foreign policy, making the world’s largest economy and previously staunch

protector of the world order a troublemak­er.

It can be expected that the traditiona­l energy industry will be at the top of Trump’s agenda. This could be a game-changer in not only the relations between the US and other major energy exporters, but also regional and global security.

That said, the geopolitic­al significan­ce of certain energy suppliers could well wane in the eyes of Washington, which might refrain from intervenin­g in regional affairs even in the face of a power vacuum following its withdrawal. A likely reshuffle of regional powers can become a major uncertaint­y facing world stability.

What is even more notable is that Trump, who had claimed to be fighting for the underclass, remains a supporter of the rich and powerful, such as the traditiona­l energy groups.

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