Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Trump aides said to prepare list of first days changes on energy

WASHINGTON — Mr Donald Trump’s advisers have prepared a short list of energy and environmental policy changes he can take within hours of being sworn in Friday, including steps to limit the role that climate change plays in government decisions.

Mr Donald J. Trump. Photo: AP

Mr Donald J. Trump. Photo: AP

Follow TODAY on WhatsApp

WASHINGTON — Mr Donald Trump’s advisers have prepared a short list of energy and environmental policy changes he can take within hours of being sworn in Friday, including steps to limit the role that climate change plays in government decisions.

The list includes nullifying President Barack Obama’s guidelines that federal agencies weigh climate change when approving pipelines, deciding what areas to open for drilling or taking other major actions, two people familiar with Mr Trump’s transition planning say.

Mr Trump also is being counselled to suspend the government’s use of a metric known as the social cost of carbon until it can be reviewed and recalculated, and to rescind a 49-year-old executive order that put the State Department in charge of permitting border-crossing oil pipelines.

Mr Trump is still working through the timing of executive actions, press secretary Sean Spicer told reporters on Thursday (Jan 19). He is “committed” to change not just on the first day, but the second day and beyond, Mr Spicer said, declining to specify whether Mr Trump will issue specific orders immediately after taking office on Friday.

Conservatives are urging Mr Trump to act quickly.

“President Obama used a pen and phone to load up the Federal Register with harmful regulations, but Donald Trump has an eraser — and he should use it,” said Mr Andy Koenig, vice president of policy at Freedom Partners, the donor organisation tied to billionaires Charles and David Koch. “While all of this won’t be resolved overnight, quick action is a positive first step for the new administration to demonstrate its commitment to addressing barriers to economic growth and opportunity for all Americans.”

CAMPAIGN PLEDGES

On the campaign trail, Mr Trump pledged to use his first day in office to roll back a suite of Obama administration actions on climate, including rescinding the Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan limiting greenhouse gas emissions from power plants. The timeline for some of those reversals might slip, although Mr Trump can put the changes in motion right away by directing agencies to take action.

For instance, Mr Trump is set to direct the Interior Department to lift an Obama-era moratorium on selling federal coal-mining rights. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell imposed the halt on new lease sales to allow time for a broad environmental review. That analysis is still underway and could continue even after the moratorium is lifted. But any new coal sales could be challenged in court.

SOCIAL COST

Two of Mr Trump’s targets have especially symbolic significance, because the Obama administration used them to elevate the role of climate change in government actions. The social cost of carbon, a calculation reflecting the potential economic damage from climate change, serves as the linchpin for many of the Obama administration’s environmental rules, from appliance efficiency requirements to limits on how much methane can leak from oil wells. Critics say the number — now nearly US$40 (S$57) for every metric ton of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere — gives artificial precision to uncertain conditions nearly 300 years in the future.

Mr Trump could use an executive order or guidance from his Office of Management and Budget to suspend the social cost of carbon, allowing time for the metric to be freshly analysed and recalculated. Conservatives at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, American Energy Alliance and Heritage Foundation have offered blueprints for change that could serve to lower the number, including making it reflect projected climate costs solely in the US, rather than globally.

NEPA Analysis

Mr Trump also can effectively nullify guidance from Obama’s Council on Environmental Quality that climate change should be factored into government agencies’ formal environmental reviews. The guidelines were meant to influence analysis of proposed agency actions under the National Environmental Policy Act. A new approach can be developed later.

The president will have wide latitude to rescind executive orders from Obama and past predecessors in the White House. One target: A 49-year-old directive from former President Lyndon B Johnson that assigned the State Department responsibility for determining whether proposed cross-border energy projects serve the “national interest”. That 1968 order paved the way for the State Department’s scrutiny of TransCanada Corp.’s proposed Keystone XL pipeline, ultimately rejected by Mr Obama.

TransCanada has not said it would reapply for permission to build the pipeline, but the day after Trump’s election,the Calgary-based company said it was looking for ways to convince the incoming administration of the project’s benefits to the US economy. Spokesman Mark Cooper said by phone he was not prepared to discuss its next steps, but emphasised that the company remains “committed to Keystone XL”.

While campaigning for president, Mr Trump said he would approve the project but would insist on a “better deal” for Americans.

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.