超级挖掘:IPAA 主席——无论拜登怎么说,他的意思是“新的钻探”

IPAA 主席史蒂夫·普鲁特赞扬众议院的盟友,但表示拜登政府有意削减石油和天然气钻探。

得克萨斯州沃斯堡——IPAA 主席 5 月 22 日对 SUPER DUG 与会者表示,美国石油和天然气行业正在与意图削减产量的拜登政府作斗争。

“坦率地说,拜登的能源政策是精神分裂的,或者可能是两极的,”民主党说客朋友告诉我,当乔·拜登脱口而出时,相信他说的话。当他说“新的钻探”时,这就是他的心声,”该行业集团领导者、Elevation Resources 总裁兼首席执行官史蒂夫·普鲁特 (Steve Pruett) 说道。

尽管能源部长詹妮弗·格兰霍姆正在尽最大努力加快项目审批速度,但“现实是拜登政府及其工作人员确实希望看到美国减少石油和天然气产量,”普鲁特说。“可再生能源战略或他所说的“能源转型”不仅无法满足这个国家的需求,而且无法满足我们全球战略盟友的需求。”

他告诉哈特能源公司的特约执行编辑、主持人尼萨·达博尼 (Nissa Darbonne),解决方案是对《国家环境政策法》(NEPA) 进行重大修改。在说服国会解决 NEPA 改革的过程中,IPAA 找到了一些人可能认为意想不到的盟友:可再生能源游说团体。

“如果不进行改革,这个国家将无法获得实施拜登政府提出的电气化战略所需的电力,”普鲁特说。

家里的朋友

该行业希望将其纳入一项名为HR 1的立法中,即《降低能源成本法案》。该法案由路易斯安那州共和党众议员史蒂夫·斯卡利斯 (Steve Scalise) 提出,并于 3 月份在众议院获得通过,该法案赋予相关内阁秘书权力,如果拟议的环境评估或环境影响报告与 NEPA 的要求基本相同,则可以认为 NEPA 的要求已得到满足。之前完成的评估或声明。

“如果我今天能和大家一起离开的话,希望是我们有一个非常合格、感兴趣、消息灵通的众议院,他们一直非常支持,”普鲁特告诉与会者。”R。1 是我们这个时代最全面的能源立法。”

如果通过成为法律,该立法将通过以下方式加快能源资源的开发、进口和出口:

  • 免除某些环境法规定的环境审查要求和其他规定要求;
  • 取消对石油和天然气进出口的某些限制;
  • 禁止总统宣布暂停使用水力压裂;
  • 指示内政部对联邦土地和水域上的石油和天然气资源进行销售销售;
  • 限制政府限制或延迟联邦土地上能源开发的权力。

如果该措施成为法律,还将减少联邦土地上石油和天然气开发的特许权使用费,并取消甲烷排放收费。

它不会的。

在民主党控制的参议院获得通过的机会为零,拜登总统发誓,如果通过的话,他将否决 HR 1。

白宫在众议院通过该法案后发表的一份声明中表示,拜登政府“希望以两党合作的方式与国会合作,解决降低能源成本、允许改革和应对能源挑战”的问题。“然而,HR 1 会让我们倒退。”

拜登:“有计划”

尽管如此,正如达博恩指出的那样,拜登政府还是为阿拉斯加的Willow 项目开了绿灯。

普鲁特称这一决定对康菲石油公司和阿拉斯加州来说是一次巨大的胜利,但他指出,这并不能解决陷入困境的联邦租赁政策。

继上一个计划于 2022 年 6 月到期后,内政部尚未发布为期五年的离岸租赁计划。他称政府的租赁努力“微乎其微”,而且在联邦近海水域,远远落后于现有的计划。需要维持未来的增长。

“你知道,这是朝着正确方向迈出的一步,但这还需要很多年,”他说。“但离岸租赁还没有发生,也没有计划。”

原文链接/hartenergy

SUPER DUG: IPAA Chairman—Whatever Biden Says, He Means ‘No New Drilling’

IPAA Chairman Steve Pruett lauds allies in the House, but says the Biden administration is intent on cutting oil and gas drilling.

FORT WORTH, Texas—The U.S. oil and gas industry is fighting a Biden administration intent on eviscerating production, the chairman of the IPAA told SUPER DUG attendees on May 22.

“The Biden energy policy, frankly, is schizophrenic or maybe it’s bipolar in that…my Democratic lobbyist friends tell me that when Joe Biden speaks off-script, believe what he says. And when he says ‘no new drilling,’ that’s his heart speaking,” said Steve Pruett, leader of the industry group and president and CEO of Elevation Resources.

And while Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm is doing her best to speed up project permitting, “the reality is the Biden administration and his staff really want to see less oil and gas produced in the United States,” Pruett said. “And there’s no way that the renewable strategy or the ‘energy transition,’ as he calls it, can meet the needs of not only this nation, but of our strategic allies across the globe.”

The solution, he told moderator Nissa Darbonne, Hart Energy’s executive editor-at-large, is to enact significant changes to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). In convincing Congress to tackle NEPA reform, IPAA has found what some might consider an unexpected ally: the renewable energy lobby.

“Without reforms, this country will not have the electricity it needs to implement the electrification strategy that the Biden administration has put forward,” Pruett said.

Friends in the House

What the industry wants is included in a piece of legislation labeled H.R. 1, known as the Lower Energy Costs Act. Introduced by Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) and passed by the House in March, the bill provides the relevant cabinet secretary with authority to deem NEPA requirements satisfied – if a proposed environmental assessment or environmental impact statement is substantially the same as a previously completed assessment or statement.

“If there’s hope that I can leave with you all today, is that we have a very qualified, interested, informed House of Representatives that have been very supportive,” Pruett told attendees. “H.R. 1 was the most comprehensive energy legislation in our time.”

If passed into law, the legislation would expedite the development, importation and exportation of energy resources by:

  • Waiving environmental review requirements and other specified requirements under certain environmental laws;
  • Eliminating certain restrictions on the import and export of oil and natural gas;
  • Prohibiting the president from declaring a moratorium on the use of hydraulic fracturing;
  • Directing the Department of the Interior to conduct sales for the leasing of oil and gas resources on federal lands and waters; and
  • Limiting the authority of the administration to restrict or delay the development of energy on federal land.

The measure would also reduce royalties for oil and gas development on federal land and eliminate charges on methane emissions if it became law.

Which it won’t.

Chances of passing the Democrat-controlled Senate are nil and President Biden has vowed to veto H.R. 1 if it did.

The Biden administration “wants to work in [a] bipartisan manner with Congress to address lowering energy costs, permitting reform and addressing energy challenges,” the White House said in a statement following passage in the House. “However, H.R. 1 would take us backward.”

Biden: “No plan”

Still, as Darbonne noted, the Biden administration gave the green light to the Willow project in Alaska.

Pruett called the decision a great win for ConocoPhillips and the state of Alaska, but noted that it doesn’t resolve troubled federal leasing policies.

The Department of the Interior has yet to release a five-year offshore leasing plan following expiration of the previous program in June 2022. He called the administration’s leasing efforts “minimal” and, in federal offshore waters, well behind what is needed to maintain future growth.

“Willow, you know, that’s a move in the right direction, but that’s many years away,” he said. “But the offshore leasing just hasn’t happened, and there’s no plan.”