The Jerusalem Post

Trump to set new executive orders on environmen­t and energy this week

- • By DAVID SHEPARDSON and VALERIE VOLCOVICI

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – US President Donald Trump this week will sign new executive orders before he completes his first 100 days in office, including two on energy and the environmen­t, which would make it easier for the United States to develop energy on and offshore, a White House official said on Sunday.

“This builds on previous executive actions that have cleared the way for job-creating pipelines, innovation­s in energy production and reduced unnecessar­y burden on energy producers,” the official said on condition of anonymity.

On Wednesday, Trump is expected to sign an executive order related to the 1906 Antiquitie­s Act, which enables the president to designate federal areas of land and water as national monuments to protect them from drilling, mining and developmen­t, the source said.

On Friday, Trump is expected to sign an order to review areas available for offshore oil and gas exploratio­n, as well as rules governing offshore drilling.

The new measures would build on a number of energyand environmen­t-related executive orders signed by Trump seeking to gut most of the climate change regulation­s put in place by predecesso­r President Barack Obama.

A summary of the forthcomin­g orders, seen by Reuters, say past administra­tions “overused” the Antiquitie­s Act, putting more federal areas under protection than necessary.

Obama had used the Antiquitie­s Act more than any other president, his White House said in December, when he designated over 1.6 million acres of land in Utah and Nevada as national monuments, protecting two areas rich in Native American artifacts from mining, oil and gas drilling.

The summary also says previous administra­tions have been “overly restrictiv­e” of offshore drilling.

Late in Obama’s second term, he banned new drilling in federal waters in parts of the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans using a 1950s-era law that environmen­tal groups say would require a drawn-out court challenge to reverse.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said during his January confirmati­on hearing that Trump could “amend” Obama’s monument designatio­ns, but any move to rescind a designatio­n would immediatel­y be challenged.

Last month, Trump signed an order calling for a review of Obama’s Clean Power Plan and reversed a ban on coal leasing on federal lands.

In addition to the energy-related orders, Trump is also expected this week to sign an order to create an office of accountabi­lity in the Veterans Affairs department.

He is also expected to create a rural America interagenc­y task force to recommend policies to address issues facing agricultur­al states.

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