President Biden capped Wednesday his one-two punch on climate, thrusting global warming to the forefront of his administration and suspending new oil-and-gas leases on federal land, despite warnings that his jabs at carbon emissions would knock out jobs and flatten the economy.
A week after reentering the Paris climate accord and canceling the Keystone XL pipeline, the Democrat signed executive orders to put the nation on an “irreversible path” to a renewable-energy economy, citing the risks of wildfires, floods, droughts, and storms that he said were made worse by climate change.
“We can’t wait any longer,” Mr. Biden said at the White House. “We see it with our own eyes. We feel it. We know it in our bones. It is an existential threat. There is a climate crisis. We know what to do; we’ve just got to do it.”
The president’s executive actions also called on government agencies to protect scientists from “political interference”; eliminate fossil fuel subsidies; create a “Civilian Climate Corps Initiative,” and conserve 30% of U.S. lands and oceans by 2030 in an effort to fight the “climate crisis.”
The Western Energy Alliance wasted no time swinging back with a federal lawsuit, arguing that Mr. Biden’s leasing moratorium exceeded his authority and violated a host of federal laws, including the National Environmental Policy Act.
“The law is clear. Presidents don’t have the authority to ban leasing on public lands. All Americans own the oil and natural gas beneath public lands, and Congress has directed them to be responsibly developed on their behalf,” said Kathleen Sgamma, the Alliance president.
While the fossil-fuel industry will be hard hit by his actions, Mr. Biden insisted that he won’t eliminate existing hydraulic fracturing or fracking.
“Let me be clear, I know this always comes up — we’re not going to ban fracking,” the president said, even though climate change “will be the center of our national security and foreign policy.”
Republicans declared the administration had begun its “war on energy” even with the coronavirus pandemic already ravaging the economy, predicting the president’s policies would drive up energy costs, send American jobs overseas, and force the nation to rely once again on foreign imports after achieving energy independence for the first time since 1957 during the Trump administration.
“I’m all for transitioning to cleaner forms of energy, but we have to deal with the reality of, for example, the fact that there are 280 million cars with internal combustion engines on our roads,” said Sen. John Cornyn, Texas Republican. “How are families going to get to work, take their kids to school, or live their life if all of a sudden the very natural resource that they depend on for their cars is no longer available?”
The American Petroleum Institute cited an analysis showing that a federal leasing and development ban would cost nearly one million U.S. jobs and put $9 billion in government revenue at risk by 2022 to states like New Mexico, where one-third of education funding is supported by oil-and-gas royalties from federal lands.
“With a stroke of a pen, the administration is shifting America’s bright energy future into reverse and setting us on a path toward greater reliance on foreign energy produced with lower environmental standards,” API President and CEO Mike Sommers said.
The U.S. has led the world since 2000 in reducing emissions on a per-country basis, thanks in large part to replacing coal-fired power plants with those fueled by natural gas, even as China has seen its emissions increase.
The federal government owns nearly 50% of the land in the Western part of the lower 48 states. In 2019, federal lands and waters accounted for 22% of total U.S. oil production and 12% of natural gas production, according to API.
Special climate envoy John F. Kerry said Mr. Biden’s actions are urgently needed to make up for what he called the damaging policies of former President Donald Trump, who advanced U.S. oil and gas production to a position of global dominance.
Clearly referring to Mr. Trump, Mr. Kerry said the Biden administration’s moves on climate and clean energy will be so broad and coordinated with foreign capitals that “no one political person in the future would be able to undo what the planet is going to be organizing over these next months and years.”
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