The Oklahoman

Biden may curb oil drilling in coming years

- By Gerson Freitas Jr., Amy Stillman, Michael Hirtzer and Joe Ryan

Biden's victory could end up reshaping the U.S. energy sector in years to come, although the president-elect may have limited room to maneuver given that control of the Senate remains unclear.

The president-elect has pledged to spend trillions of dollars to speed up the transition from fossil fuels, slash emissions and curb climate change. Biden has also promised to ban new fracking on federal lands, which he may try to achieve via an executive order. Such a move would limit shale companies' operations in several states, including New Mexico.

Biden's electoral win adds to the hurdles facing the oil and gas industry, already hammered by a crash in demand amid the pandemic. The Democrat is expected to block new drilling permits on federal lands, something he could do via an executive order. His move to clamp down on the industry's emissions would reverse the Trump administra­tion's relaxation of environmen­tal regulation, and likely increase the cost of producing, transporti­ng and processing hydrocarbo­ns. Biden's target for a 100% clean electricit­y grid by 2035 could squeeze natural gas's share of power generation, and his aim to boost electric vehicles sales would erode demand for gasoline and diesel.

To be sure, Biden's proposal to curb production on federal lands could have a positive effect on prices by trimming supply expansion. Stimulus spending to revive the economy could also boost demand for fossil fuels in the shorter term.

Biden's climate plan doesn't mention liquefied natural gas. Still, the constructi­on of new pipeline sand LNG terminal sin the U.S ., which has emerged in the last few years as a major global exporter of LNG, could face higher scrutiny should Biden be able to form a Democratic majority at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which oversees the constructi­on of energy infrastruc­ture.

U.S. LNG exporters could eventually benefit in one way under Biden: if his administra­tion succeed sin its efforts to reduce emissions from America's shale fields, that may attract climatecon­scious buyers in Europe. Also, a thaw in U.S.-China relations could give U.S. exporters greater access to world markets.

Biden's presidency could super-charge growth of clean electricit­y in America. During the campaign, he said he's aiming to eliminate carbon emissions from the power sector by 2035.

Investor interest in green stocks and technologi­es has surged recently. Among the things driving growth: mounting homeowner demand for rooftop solar and batteries amid blackouts from hurricanes and wildfire risk and a growing appetite for environmen­tal, social and governance, or ESG, investment­s. Wind and solar power are already the cheapest electrical sources in many markets.

Coal

Biden's victory is likely to accelerate the decline of coal. Demand has slumped as utilities continue to shift to cheaper and cleaner natural gas and renewables, and Biden's call for a carbon-free electricit­y grid within 15 years will leave little room for the dirtiest fossil fuel. Trump vowed during the 2016 campaign to revive the industry, and once in office he rolled back numerous environmen­tal regulation­s to aid miners. But his efforts did little to counter a decline that's been driven by inexorable market forces. Coal will account for about 19% of U.S. electricit­y this year, down from more than half as recently as 2006.

USMCA

A Bid en victory may put pressure on Mexico President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to damp down his nationalis­t energy agenda. Lopez Obrador has stoked tensions between the trade partners by halting foreign energy projects —including sus pending competitiv­e oil and electricit­y auctions, calling on regulators to stop issuing new permits, and announcing that he may change the constituti­on to reverse the energy privatizat­ions of his predecesso­r. Last month, a group of U.S. senators wrote to Trump, an ally of Lopez Obrador, saying that Mexico' s actions

“undermine the spirit” of the USMCA trade agreement covering the U.S ., Mexico and Canada.

Ethanol

A Bid en victory could mean a halt to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency' s granting of refinery waive rs for the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard, which in turn could help stabilize prices and demand for fuels made from corn and soy beans. The RFS also will reset for biofuel use in 2023, meaning the EPA will help decide how much ethanol and biodiesel are mixed into petroleumb­ased fuels in the U.S. Biden could keep blending targets near current levels or raise them to prevent plants from shutting down, even as his administra­tion looks to transition away from an oil-based vehicle fleet.

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