USA TODAY International Edition

Biden’s policies have led to higher gas prices

He has chosen climate activism over a rise in oil production

- David Bernhardt David Bernhardt served as secretary at the Department of Interior during the Trump administra­tion. He now is chair of the Center for American Freedom at the America First Policy Institute.

Gasoline prices had already hit a record high the morning that President Joe Biden announced a ban on Russian energy imports on March 8.

The last time average gas prices topped $ 4 a gallon was in 2008, when George W. Bush was president. At that time, the White House worked with the Department of the Interior to expand American energy production.

By contrast, the Biden administra­tion has been curbing oil and gas drilling in the USA. This means that today's pain at the pump is unlikely to disappear anytime soon.

Gasoline prices soared in the summer of 2008.

President George W. Bush responded by encouragin­g the Department of Interior to leave no stone unturned to boost American oil production. Ultimately, that July, he lifted a presidenti­al directive that his father had issued restrictin­g offshore oil drilling. Since then, American technical innovation, enterprise and energy workers have powered a domestic energy renaissanc­e.

President Donald Trump leaned into this renaissanc­e.

He saw energy production as vital for America's economy and national security. President Trump's America First energy policy focused on expanding sensible energy developmen­t from all sources.

Under his leadership, the federal government made getting drilling permits faster and easier, opened more land to energy production, and maintained environmen­tal safeguards. During Trump's tenure, the number of federal drilling permits the Department of Interior issued nearly doubled.

Priorities on energy

These reforms expanded the energy renaissanc­e from private to federal lands – increasing American energy production considerab­ly. U. S. oil production more than doubled from 5 million barrels per day in 2008 to 12.3 million in 2019.

Under President Trump, America began producing more energy than it consumed – making America energy independen­t for the first time since the 1950s. Gasoline prices consequent­ly remained low throughout his term.

As soon as Biden became president, he reversed course, prioritizi­ng climate activism over energy independen­ce.

On the first day of the Biden administra­tion, the Department of the Interior's acting leadership revoked their subordinat­es' authority to “issue any onshore or offshore fossil fuel authorizat­ion” for new operations. A handful of political appointees would individual­ly make these decisions instead of dozens of qualified profession­al staff.

At Biden's direction, the Interior Department also suspended oil and gas leasing in the small portions of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge that were opened to drilling.

And just last month, the Biden administra­tion froze all applicatio­ns for new oil and gas developmen­t on federal lands and waters. It remains to be seen whether Biden and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland will renew offshore oil lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico that will expire in June.

Not coincident­ally, the number of drilling permits the Bureau of Land Management approved for federal lands dropped by 80% between December 2020 and December 2021. And despite the post- COVID economic rebound, U. S. oil production fell last year.

The Trump administra­tion spent years expediting oil permitting.

The Biden administra­tion has unwound that progress.

Liberal groups have criticized the Biden administra­tion for issuing more drilling permits in its first year than Trump did in his. These criticisms are misleading.

The Trump administra­tion spent four years reforming the permitting process to facilitate oil and gas drilling. During Trump's tenure, the number of federal drilling permits the Department of Interior issued nearly doubled. The Biden administra­tion unwound most of that progress in less than 12 months.

Unsurprisi­ngly, gas prices have risen on Biden's watch.

When Biden took office, regular gasoline cost an average of $ 2.33 a gallon. By the end of January of this year – before the Ukraine crisis – regular gasoline prices had risen to $ 3.37 a gallon. Now gas costs more than $ 4 a gallon.

Elections have consequenc­es.

Biden during his candidacy was open about his desire to reorder the American energy landscape.

The Biden administra­tion has since focused on limiting domestic energy production.

The American people will now spend the next three years finding out exactly how much they will pay – both at the pump and for our national security – for his administra­tion's hostility to American energy.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/ AP ?? Gas prices in West Hollywood, Calif., on March 8.
JAE C. HONG/ AP Gas prices in West Hollywood, Calif., on March 8.
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