Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Natural gas project permits paused

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is delaying considerat­ion of new natural gas export terminals in the United States, even as gas shipments to Europe and Asia have soared since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The election year decision by President Joe Biden aligns with environmen­talists who fear the huge increase in exports, in the form of liquefied natural gas, or LNG, is locking in potentiall­y catastroph­ic planet-warming emissions when the Democratic president has pledged to cut climate pollution in half by 2030.

“While MAGA Republican­s willfully deny the urgency of the climate crisis, condemning the American people to a dangerous future, my administra­tion will not be complacent,” Biden said in a statement Friday. “We will not cede to special interests. We will heed the calls of young people and frontline communitie­s who are using their voices to demand action from those with the power to act.”

The current economic and environmen­tal analyses the Energy Department uses to evaluate LNG projects don’t adequately account for potential cost hikes for American consumers and manufactur­ers or the impact of greenhouse gas emissions, the White House said.

Industry groups condemned the pause as a “win for Russia,” while environmen­talists cheered an action they have long been seeking as a way to counter Biden’s approval of the huge Willow oil project in Alaska last year.

“This decision is brave, because Donald Trump (the man who pulled us out of the Paris climate accords on the grounds that climate change is a hoax) will attack it mercilessl­y,” environmen­tal activist Bill McKibben wrote in an online post.

“But it’s also very, very savvy: Biden wants young people, who care about climate above all, in his corner. They were angry about his dumb approval of the Willow oil project,” McKibben added.

A proposed LNG export terminal in Louisiana would produce about 20 times the greenhouse gas emissions of Willow, McKibben noted.

“And of course everyone understand­s that if Biden is not reelected this win means nothing. It will disappear on Day One when (Trump) begins his relentless campaign to ‘drill drill drill,’” he said.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said the pause will not affect already authorized export projects and noted that U.S. gas exports reached record highs last year. The pause will not immediatel­y

affect U.S. supplies to Europe or Asia, Granholm said, since seven LNG terminals are currently in operation, with several more expected to come online in the next few years.

“We remain committed to ensuring our partners’ medium-term energy needs are met,” she told reporters at a White House briefing late Thursday. If necessary, the Energy Department can allow exceptions for national security needs, Granholm said.

She and other officials declined to say how long the permitting pause will last, but said a study of how proposed LNG projects will affect the environmen­t, the economy and national security will take “some months.” A public comment period after that will likely delay any decisions on pending LNG projects un- til after the 2024 presidenti­al election.

U.S. exports of liquefied natural gas began less than a decade ago, but have grown rapidly in recent years to the point that the U.S. has become the world’s largest gas exporter. Exports rose sharply after Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, and Biden and Granholm have celebrated the delivery of U.S. gas to Europe and Asia as a key geopolitic­al weapon against Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The American Petroleum Institute, the largest lobbying group for the oil and gas industry, turned those comments against the Democratic administra­tion as it condemned Biden’s action.

“This is a win for Russia and a loss for American allies, U.S. jobs and global climate progress,” said Mike Sommers, API’s president and CEO.

“There is no review needed to understand the clear benefits of U.S. LNG (exports) for stabilizin­g global energy markets, supporting thousands of American jobs and reducing emissions around the world by transition­ing countries toward cleaner fuels” and away from coal, Sommers said in a statement.

Biden’s action “is nothing more than a broken promise to U.S. allies, and it’s time for the administra­tion to stop playing politics with global energy security,” he said.

Granholm, who has made it a point to work with oil and gas executives even as Biden has exchanged sometimes pointed barbs with them, said “a lot has happened” since LNG exports began about eight years ago.

“We need to have an even greater understand­ing of the (global energy) market need, the long-term supply and demand of energy resources and the environmen­tal factors,” she said. “So by updating the analysis process now, we will be better informed to avoid export authorizat­ions that diminish our domestic energy availabili­ty, that weaken our security or that undermine our economy.”

Granholm emphasized the delay “is not a retroactiv­e review of already authorized exports,” nor is it intended to punish the oil and gas industry.

“We are committed to strengthen­ing energy security here in the U.S. and with our allies, and we’re committed to protecting Americans against climate change as we lead the world into a clean energy future,” she said.

Jeremy Symons, an envi- ronmental consultant and former climate policy adviser at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, called Biden’s decision a “game-changer” in the fight against climate change.

“The president is drawing a line in the sand to put the na- tion’s interests first and listen to climate science,” Symons said in an interview. “The days of massive fossil fuel projects like the CP2 project escaping scrutiny from the federal government are over. We now have a president who cares about climate change.”

Symons and other activists have targeted the $10 billion Calcasieu Pass 2 project, or CP2, along Louisiana’s Gulf Coast, noting it would be the nation’s largest export terminal if built. The project in Cameron Parish would export up to 20 million tons of chilled natural gas per year, creating more greenhouse gas emissions than even the Willow project, which environmen­talists have decried as a “carbon bomb.”

Symons called the gas project “bad for our nation, bad for our health and bad for our economy.”

Shaylyn Hynes, spokeswoma­n for the project’s owner, Virginia-based Venture Global, said the Biden administra­tion “continues to create uncertaint­y about whether our allies can rely on U.S. LNG for their energy security.”

A prolonged pause on LNG exports “would shock the global energy market … and send a devastatin­g signal to our allies that they can no longer rely on the United States,” said Hynes, who served as an Energy Department spokeswoma­n in the Trump administra­tion.

“The true irony is this policy would hurt the climate and lead to increased (greenhouse gas) emissions, as it would force the world to pivot to coal” instead of natural gas, Hynes said.

Climate activists dispute that, calling LNG a leading contributo­r to climate change due to methane leaks and an energy-intensive process to liquefy gas.

 ?? ?? A heat exchanger and its transfer pipes are seen at Dominion Energy’s Cove Point LNG Terminal in Lusby, Md., in June 2014.
(AP/Cliff Owen)
A heat exchanger and its transfer pipes are seen at Dominion Energy’s Cove Point LNG Terminal in Lusby, Md., in June 2014. (AP/Cliff Owen)

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