Boston Herald

Energy pros put Liz Warren on blast for industry attacks

- by CHRIS WOODWARD Chris Woodward writes about industry and technology for InsideSour­ces.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s latest attempt to “turn up the heat” on the energy sector sparked a backlash from industry leaders who say the real problem comes from policies the Massachuse­tts’ Democrat has endorsed.

In recent letters to natural gas producers, Warren blasted what she called their “corporate greed” and demanded an explanatio­n for the record exports of natural gas at the same time prices are rising in the U.S.

Warren wants the industry to respond to questions about “the extent to which these price increases are being driven by energy companies’ corporate greed and profiteeri­ng as they moved record amounts of U.S. gas out of the country,” she wrote.

She got a response, but not the one she demanded.

Leaders in the natural gas sector responded with a letter of their own, dismissing Warren’s comments as a diversion, one intended to distract consumers from the impact of the energy policies she’s championed.

“This a misguided and headline-grabbing ploy,” says David E. Callahan, president of the Marcellus Shale Coalition.

“If she knows anything about these highly complex energy markets, she must know what’s really going on here,” added Callahan, who co-authored a response letter alongside the leaders of the Gas & Oil Associatio­n of West Virginia and Ohio Oil & Gas Associatio­n. “It’s a commodity market, prices ebb and flow, and the market is responding to those signals.”

Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia are among the top five natural gas producers in the nation, with the Keystone State alone producing one-fifth (21.1%) of the nation’s supply. (Texas edges out Pennsylvan­ia for the top spot at 23.9%.)

Warren is an aggressive supporter of the Green New Deal, which would drasticall­y restrict the production of oil and natural gas. In Massachuse­tts, policies blocking the expansion of natural gas pipelines have resulted in Russian LNG tankers in Boston Harbor bringing fuel to the Bay State.

“She has her constituen­ts to represent and her political affiliatio­n to support,” said Charlie Burd, executive director of GO-WV. “But to be perfectly honest, I just think those comments almost show a complete lack of understand­ing on how energy is explored for, produced, and transporte­d in this country.”

“It’s really supply and demand 101,” added Burd. “It’s not rocket science.”

“Hostility toward the fossil fuel industry ill-serves the American people, including Pennsylvan­ians who sit atop huge natural gas and coal deposits that provide plentiful and affordable energy to millions of people,” said Gordon Tomb, a senior fellow at Commonweal­th Foundation. “The benefits of these resources can hardly be overstated: well-paying jobs and prosperity as well as a foundation for all kinds of business activity and energy security.”

Meanwhile, Europe is facing fuel scarcity as winter approaches and some of the nations are turning back to coal to meet immediate demands. American exports are vital, experts say.

Frank Macchiarol­a, American Petroleum Institute senior vice president of policy, economics and regulatory affairs, also has a message for U.S. policymake­rs.

“They play a critical role in spurring long-term investment in U.S. natural gas supplies as well as expanded pipeline capacity to deliver the energy America and the world needs while driving down emissions,” says Macchiarol­a. “Rising natural gas costs reflect an imbalance between supply and demand that is exacerbate­d in regions like the northeast due to added state-level policy restrictio­ns on building much-needed gas infrastruc­ture that has made the region more reliant on foreign imports.”

Callahan believes Warren should “support infrastruc­ture expansion” to get the product where it is needed, domestical­ly and globally.

“We felt the need to set the record straight, that the rhetoric is dangerous,” Callahan said.

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