Houston Chronicle

U.S. offshore energy boss sees opportunit­y

- By Jennifer A Dlouhy

The U.S. government is moving urgently to nurture new offshore wind and carbon storage industries despite some economic hurdles, according to the nation’s newly minted ocean energy regulator.

The tasks of overseeing the buildout of those nascent industries falls to Liz Klein, an environmen­tal lawyer and clean energy champion just appointed director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.

Klein takes over at a critical time, as her agency makes decisions about where to install ocean wind farms, how to safely store carbon dioxide under the sea floor and the future of oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.

“The president has been clear that we are in a climate crisis, we have a responsibi­lity as the federal government to do something about that and we can turn that into an opportunit­y to transition to cleaner sources of energy,” Klein told Bloomberg in her first interview in the new role. At the same time, the focus will be on doing it in a “way that really supports communitie­s” while tapping American smarts and innovation, she added.

Those opportunit­ies converge in the Gulf of Mexico. The bureau is on track to sell the firstever offshore wind developmen­t rights in the Gulf later this year. And it’s writing rules that will govern the storage of carbon dioxide under the sea floor — including how the government makes the area available to companies eager to take advantage of newly expanded tax credits to pump captured emissions undergroun­d.

Meanwhile, the agency is working to finalize an overdue five-year plan for offshore oil leasing and hold two auctions of drilling rights in the Gulf of Mexico that were mandated by the sweeping climate-and-tax law enacted by President Joe Biden last year.

The administra­tion’s initial offshore oil leasing proposal left open the possibilit­y the government could hold as many as 11 auctions in US coastal waters between mid-2023 and mid-2028 — or none at all.

Under the Inflation Reduction Act, the government’s ability to issue renewable energy rights is tied to the sale of oil leases — potentiall­y forcing some of those auctions. “We have new statutory requiremen­ts” so that “if we are to continue offshore wind leasing, we also need to continue offshore oil and gas developmen­t,” Klein said.

Klein is a veteran of the Interior Department, having previously worked in the agency under former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. She’s drawn fire from fossil fuel advocates for some of her work in the private sector, including as deputy director of the nonpartisa­n State Energy and Environmen­tal Impact Center at New York University, which helped state attorneys general challenge federal government environmen­tal policies, including bids by former President Donald Trump to dial back rules.

Klein cast that work as an asset, saying it gave her perspectiv­e on state interests that is valuable in federal government.

Klein is consulting with counterpar­ts in other countries to swiftly establish a new regulatory regime overseeing carbon storage under the ocean floor. With carbon capture and storage initiative­s supercharg­ed by the Inflation Reduction Act, and just a few offshore storage projects globally — in the North Sea — it’s a chance to cultivate a brand new industry in the US.

The opening may be greatest in the Gulf of Mexico, which has for decades been a hub of U.S. offshore oil developmen­t — providing about 15 percent of domestic production. In contrast to other U.S. waters, there’s more data about the ocean bottom and what lies beneath it, as well as a chance to leverage the existing network of subsea pipelines and their proximity to petrochemi­cal facilities in Louisiana and Texas.

“It presents a great opportunit­y,” Klein said. “It is the perfect example, in many ways, of what the president talks about when he says we have an opportunit­y to turn this climate crisis into job growth, economic developmen­t and supporting communitie­s.”

Klein said she remains “aggressive­ly positive” about offshore wind’s potential buildout, even as mounting supply chain and inflation woes threaten to delay or derail some projects. Concerns about the industry’s impacts on fishing and endangered whales also bedevil its prospects.

Any new energy developmen­t can expect challenges, but the U.S. has the innovative chops to work through them, Klein said. “Very smart engineers and scientists” are “committed to see this happen.”

 ?? John Moore/Getty Images ?? Wind turbines near Block Island, R.I. The U.S. is on track to sell the first ever offshore wind developmen­t rights in the Gulf of Mexico later this year.
John Moore/Getty Images Wind turbines near Block Island, R.I. The U.S. is on track to sell the first ever offshore wind developmen­t rights in the Gulf of Mexico later this year.

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