USA TODAY US Edition

Trump quietly scores wins on energy agenda

Victories come amid other failed initiative­s

- Michael Collins WASHINGTON

President Trump had barely settled into the Oval Office in January when he signed executive orders opening the door for constructi­on of the controvers­ial Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines.

He was just getting started. In the following weeks, the Trump administra­tion lifted a moratorium on coal leasing on federal land; blocked regulation­s on power-plant carbon emissions; overturned a ban on oil and gas drilling in the Arctic Ocean; delayed rules intended to prevent methane leaks from oil and gas wells; and announced plans for the U.S. to pull out of the Paris climate agreement.

Trump’s promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act suffered a stunning defeat in Congress, and the prospects for his tax-reform pledge are far from certain. But when it comes to energy policy, the administra­tion has managed to forge ahead on initiative­s aimed at not only making the U.S. energy independen­t but turning it into a dominant energy force.

“These are consequent­ial changes in the sense that they move energy policy in a new direction — essentiall­y a 180-degree turn from where we had been less than a year ago,” said David Konisky, an energy expert at Indiana University’s School of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs.

Much of Trump’s early focus has been on dismantlin­g rules and regulation­s put in place by President Obama to protect the environmen­t, fight climate change and make the country less dependent on fossil fuels.

Trump has succeeded in moving his energy agenda forward be-

Much of Trump’s early focus has been on ditching rules and regulation­s put in place by President Obama.

cause he has been able to use administra­tive actions rather than waiting to build consensus in Congress, Konisky said.

Environmen­tal groups and others, however, are challengin­g many of Trump’s attempts.

This month, a federal appeals court in Washington ordered the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to enforce an Obama-era rule limiting the amount of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, that can be emitted from new or modified oil and gas wells.

The administra­tion can expect other legal challenges, said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club. “This administra­tion is the biggest threat to the health of our planet,” he said. “Resisting this administra­tion is a top priority for the Sierra Club for now and the foreseeabl­e future.”

What’s more, watchdog groups say, Trump is filling his administra­tion with people with ties to the energy sector. Michael Catanzaro, Trump’s special assistant for domestic energy and environmen­tal policy, has worked as a lobbyist for several oil and gas companies. This month, Trump nominated Michael Menezes and Paul Dabbar, both of whom have personal investment­s in energy companies, as undersecre­taries in the Energy Department. Several other appointees in the Energy and Interior department­s also have worked for or lobbied on behalf of energy interests.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI, AP ??
EVAN VUCCI, AP

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