Trump Obliterates Obama Gas Rule to Bring Jobs Back
to Rural America, by Ben Marquis, 2/14/18
President Donald Trump has repeatedly
made clear his intention to make America not only energy independent, but energy dominant on a global scale. A large part of
making that goal a reality is rolling back regulations put in place by prior
administrations that restrict energy production.
According to the Washington Examiner, Interior Department officials
announced Monday that they would be revising a restrictive and costly rule
regarding a limit on methane emissions that was implemented near the tail end
of former President Barack Obama’s administration.
Many believed the rule targeted oil and
gas producers in rural areas of the country, and was deemed to be not only
costly and restrictive, but also duplicative and redundant when compared with
similar federal and state regulations already on the books.
“In order to achieve energy dominance through
responsible energy production, we need smart regulations, not punitive
regulations,” said the assistant secretary for land and minerals management,
Joe Balash. “We believe this proposed rule strikes that balance and will
allow job growth in rural America.”
The Bureau of Land Management, a subset
of the Interior Department, chimed in with its own statement on the changes to
the “venting and flare rule.” “This proposal would align the regulations with administration
priorities on energy development, job creation and reduced compliance costs
while also working more closely with
existing state regulatory efforts,” the department stated.
Of course, liberal environmentalist
groups were outraged at the “unconscionable” announcement of the revised rule.
But Republicans and the American men and women who make a living extracting
abundant oil and gas from the ground cheered the development.
According to The Associated Press, the Obama administration imposed the
restrictive measure on oil and gas producers in November of 2016, with the rule
taking partial effect in January of 2017, even as it had been challenged
immediately as “arbitrary and capricious” by several lawsuits.
However, President Trump issued an order
in March of 2017 to all executive branch agencies
to review their regulatory actions which would “potentially burden the
development or use of domestically produced energy resources and appropriately
suspend, revise or rescind those that unduly burden the development of domestic
energy resources beyond the degree necessary to protect the public interest or
otherwise comply with the law.”
The AP noted that an initial attempt to
roll back the regulation was blocked by a district court judge, but Interior Secretary Ryan
Zinke ultimately announced a delay of full implementation of the rule until
January of 2019, according to a December report from Reuters.
As it turned out, that delay may simply
have been announced to buy time for the completion of the revised rule, which
the AP noted would be officially entered into the Federal Register later this
week.
“We’re supportive of smart regulation that is
effectively tailored to (the Bureau of Land Management’s) authority to prevent
waste and conserve resources,” stated Erik Milito, director of the American
Petroleum Institute. “We are hopeful the new proposed rule will strengthen our
nation’s energy renaissance, our economy and environmental stewardship.”
“The previous administration scorned
domestic energy development and crafted the prior rule to deliberately stifle
it,” Republican Utah Rep. Rob Bishop stated, according to The Daily Caller.
“This is a necessary step to promote
investment in federal and tribal lands so that economies in the west can grow,”
added Bishop, who serves as chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee.
Furthermore, The Caller noted that a
recent study released by a group called Texans for Energy had found that, prior
to the implementation of Obama’s rule intended to cut methane emissions, such
emissions had already been declining significantly throughout 2011-2016 due to
both pre-existing regulations and increased efficiency by oil and gas producers
— again showing how the rule was both restrictive and redundant.
This announcement is great news for the
economy as a whole as it means more jobs in rural America, as well as for
our nation’s oil and gas producers, and should help in their joint quest with
Trump to attain dominance of the global energy market in the years to come.
Share this story on Facebook to spread
the word about the Trump’s administration announcement of a revision of a
controversial Obama-era rule restricting American production of oil and gas.
What do you think of the
Trump administration revising restrictive rules put in place by Obama? Scroll down to
comment below!
https://conservativetribune.com/trump-obama-gas-rule-jobs-rural/?ff_source=Email
Comments
This is a good move. Methane is a non-problem.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment