Biden’s War on Domestic Energy Intensifies

By Matt Egan Brent Bennett

February 18, 2024

On Jan. 26, President Joe Biden took an aggressive step forward in his war on American energy by halting the permitting of new liquified natural gas (LNG) export terminals. This action has massive global implications, as TPPF’s Mark Mills laid out when the decision was publicly announced.

It also has the added benefit for the president of attacking primarily Texas and Louisiana, red states that account for the bulk of U.S. LNG exports. This decision comes on the heels of Texas taking steps to secure its border with Mexico, putting the state directly at odds with the administration—once again.

But the president’s politically motivated actions will reverberate far beyond America’s natural gas producing regions. By locking global supply and demand imbalances in place for longer, this decision will send billions of dollars to foreign producers and raise the cost of energy globally. Any short-term drop in domestic prices will ultimately be negated by reductions in future domestic production.

If this decision doesn’t help Americans and hurts our allies, why do it? Politics, of course, primarily appeasing the radical green cartel that forms a key part of the president’s base, and, perhaps to the surprise of a casual observer, rent-seeking industries looking to hoard short-term supply.

President Biden’s environmental extremism means our allies will become more reliant on our adversaries. For context, 87% of US LNG exports went primarily to U.S. allies in Europe and Asia. The Biden administration blunting America’s ability to participate on the world energy stage creates a vacuum that will undoubtedly be filled by the other major natural gas exporting countries—Russia, Qatar, and Iran—who are certainly not friends of the U.S.

Bear in mind that the Department of Energy (DOE) has never denied an LNG export application, for environmental reasons or otherwise, and rejected a petition to do so just six months ago. President Biden could be pushing for more U.S. LNG exports, because the U.S. produces natural gas more responsibly and with fewer emissions than any LNG exporting country save Australia. However, despite the obvious fact that domestic gas has been a major driver of U.S. GHG emissions reductions and air quality improvements, the green cartels are trying to make the case that LNG exports will not do the same for other countries.

Also, serious questions surround the administration’s legal authority to issue such an all-encompassing, job-killing freeze in energy exports. Congress has not authorized the DOE to take such drastic actions, which would have implications both inside and outside our borders. It is also absurd that the Natural Gas Act, a relic of 1930s-era policymaking, gives the DOE power to deny imports and exports, outside the bounds of trade agreements. States need to take the administration to the courts over this decision, and fortunately, many are already expressing a willingness to do so.

This LNG export ban may be the most strong-armed, authoritative action against American energy producers taken by an administration that has become known for such transgressions. Luckily, Congress is already working to reverse this massive mistake by advancing a bipartisan bill, Unlocking our Domestic LNG Potential Act.

It’s notable when President Biden’s anti-energy policies become so extreme that they elicit condemnations from members of his own party. By rolling back this executive action and ensuring the president cannot have unilateral control over vital energy production and exports, Congress would take a significant step to secure American energy leadership now and for years to come.

Matt Eagan is the Director of Federal Affairs at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

Brent Bennett, Ph.D., is the policy director for Life:Powered, an initiative of the Texas Public Policy Foundation to raise America’s energy IQ.

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.

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AWG
February 19, 2024 6:07 pm

Biden is Putin’s stooge!

(is that the proper heckling when a politician does something that ends up benefiting Russian interest?)

heme212
Reply to  AWG
February 19, 2024 6:24 pm

only if it hurts us as well, so… yes

Chris Hanley
Reply to  AWG
February 19, 2024 7:30 pm

The Democratic Party always accuse the other side of doing what they themselves are doing.

J Boles
Reply to  Chris Hanley
February 20, 2024 5:59 am

Democrat, not Democratic.

Reply to  J Boles
February 20, 2024 10:41 am

Nowadays it is more like Democommies. They do not represent the interests of US citizens, they represent our enemies at every opportunity, harm us at every opportunity, as well as ignoring our Constitution, immigration laws & refuse to carry out their sworn duties. Can we actually consider them a legitimate US government?

Tom.1
Reply to  AWG
February 19, 2024 7:42 pm

Not Putin, but the extremist elements of his own party, who are a bigger threat to this country than Putin, by a mile. Biden is the closest thing to a sock-puppet President we’ve ever had.

Reply to  AWG
February 20, 2024 9:10 am

“Biden is Putin’s stooge!”

There is more to this than meets the eye

Lets look at this from a European point of view

Europe has minimal minerals and energy
The majority of them have to be imported
.
Europe has to to export to pay for the imports, therefore it must be competitive in world markets
It cannot be competitive with high-cost wind, solar, batteries, EVs, heat pumps, electric stoves, etc. 
Therefore, Europe has to shame other countries into the Global Warming hoax, so these countries will also have high-cost wind, solar, batteries, etc.
.
The UK and Germany have the highest household electric rates in Europe to pay for climate follies, while industrial rates are kept low, to minimize mass-exodus of energy-intensive industries.
That is why Trump got out of “Paris”, so he could be free from the Paris trap, to make America great again, MAGA
.
Europe has to be on the US hegemony “hate-Russia” bandwagon to weaken Russia and break it in pieces, take its resources, and weaken China, to tell China what to do, according the Western “rules-based order”; the rules are changed, or ignored, by the West, as needed.
.
According to “hate-Russia” bandwagon, Russia has to be taken over by Western companies, as happened during totally naive Yeltsin.
Ukraine and its people have to be misused, abused, destroyed to make it happen, “for as long as it takes”.
.
Impoverished, neo-nationalist Ukraine is finally beginning to realize, it has been hugely stupid/deceived to play the battering-ram role for Europe and US, because, despite enormous sanctions, Russia did not collapse, grew its GDP at 3%, while Europe was at 0%, in 2023

Dennis Gerald Sandberg
February 19, 2024 6:48 pm

I commented, but when I tried to correct a typo the whole thing wiped out. This is ridiculous, please correct this problem. Frustrating.

Scarecrow Repair
Reply to  Dennis Gerald Sandberg
February 19, 2024 7:51 pm

Bug reports with such skimpy details are useless. Try adding a time, at least.

Reply to  Dennis Gerald Sandberg
February 19, 2024 8:28 pm

I see it from time to time with ‘Safari’ on my Mac. When it happens, just click on Edit > Undo (Typing or whatever you were doing) before hitting return and that should bring your comment back to a state where you can then edit it. Hope that helps.

Reply to  Dennis Gerald Sandberg
February 20, 2024 1:20 am

If making a long comment, I write it out in notepad, correct any typos and errors, then copy and paste the whole thing.

Pro tip: Always refresh the page before posting anything it’s taken you 20 minutes to write to see if anyone else has just made exactly the same point.

Reply to  Right-Handed Shark
February 20, 2024 5:14 am

Good advice.

Reply to  Right-Handed Shark
February 20, 2024 8:19 am

Or to see if you’ve been randomly logged out and end up with a “comments have been closed” error

Reply to  Right-Handed Shark
February 20, 2024 11:03 am

Excellent advice. Typing out a carefully worded reply & having it suddenly disappear is enormously frustrating. If you have a safe copy in a notepad it saves time & frustration.

MarkW
Reply to  Dennis Gerald Sandberg
February 21, 2024 9:24 am

From time to time, I’ve had a problem when correcting misspelling. The system underlines the misspelled word. I right click on the word, then select the spelling I want.
Instead of replacing the word, the entire comment disappears.

So far I’ve been able to recover by hitting ctrl-z and manually fixing the word.

observa
February 19, 2024 6:56 pm

If this decision doesn’t help Americans and hurts our allies, why do it?

Politicians always need a diversionary unicorn when they get it badly wrong-
US to scale back tougher vehicle emissions regulations – report (msn.com)

You’d think they’d learn from other’s mistakes but once their marvellous copycat thought bubble is out there their hubris won’t let them and so the spin begins in earnest-
New vehicle efficiency standard set to be introduced next year – ABC News

Reply to  observa
February 20, 2024 10:58 am

You are making assumptions that they do not intend to sabotage the US & aid our enemies. If it was accidental or incompetence they would occasionally get something right. When it is 100% wrong 100% of the time, it is highly unlikely that it is not intentional. The results are destroying our Nation before our eyes & we should reconsider the legitimacy of a government that represents the interests of our enemies 100% of the time & our citizens never. Especially when they attack anyone who wants to represent the people & follow our Constitution instead of the dictates of the present Administration & the Pelosi/Schumer gang who support their version of “THEIR Democracy”.. It is also suspicious that the present Administration was chosen from the most radical Marxists available & they are making very destructive decisions for our Nation. As all scientists know, ignoring the facts never works out well.

Scissor
February 19, 2024 7:27 pm

From a purely selfish perspective, consumers in the U.S. benefit from lower natural gas prices when it’s export is restricted. Of course this hurts U.S. companies involved in the LNG business.

Get FJB out of the way, and the market will make necessary corrections.

Nick Stokes
Reply to  Scissor
February 19, 2024 9:15 pm

the market will make necessary corrections”

Yes, it will. For US consumers, prices will necessarily skyrocket. With unrestricted export, locals pay the world price. Production goes up, depleting reserves, and someone makes a lot of money.

It happened in Australia. In about 2015, large export terminals were built in Queensland (some export had been happening for years from WA). Production went way up:
comment image

and so did local prices:
comment image

Now I don’t have a strong view on whether this is a good or bad thing. But a US President might well be careful of the welfare of his voters.

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 19, 2024 9:34 pm

Are you suggesting that nations ban exports? How about if we do away with ‘specialization’, the ‘division of labor’, etc.,and go back to those halcyon days of yore when we all just poked holes in the ground with a sharp stick in search of grubs?

Nick Stokes
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 19, 2024 9:47 pm

Well, Trump was big on tariffs. As I said, on this I don’t have a strong view. But for local consumers, prices will necessarily skyrocket with unlimited export. I can understand why Biden resists that.

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 19, 2024 9:58 pm

‘Well, Trump was big on tariffs.’

No one’s perfect. Personally, I’d eliminate the regulatory burdens that incentivize companies to offshore their production, starting with the so-called ‘endangerment finding’ that underpins the Left’s war on fossil fuels.

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 1:21 am

Trump was big on tariffs

Only on Chinese knock-off slave produced imports.

But you knew that, didn’t you !

Reply to  bnice2000
February 20, 2024 4:35 am

Tariffs on American imports are taxes on Americans, but you knew that, didn’t you?

Simon
Reply to  bnice2000
February 20, 2024 4:03 pm

Wrong again. Trump imposed Tariffs on a number of countries. For a start there was the entire EU then there was Canada and Mexico. So no not just China.

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 4:43 am

Let me see if I can understand this. The US Department of Commerce exists, at least in part, to encourage American exports, enhancing the “balance of trade”, correct? If so, what they are doing is creating higher prices for American consumers by shipping soy beans to Japan or pick-up trucks to Argentina or hockey sticks to Finland. Why would benevolent Uncle Sam do such a thing?

SteveP
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 20, 2024 6:04 am

Yes, exactly. I believe that the people who think that limiting LNG exports will benefit US consumers are wrong. If it were that simple, the US could ban all exports say of food and agricultural products and then food prices domestically would be lower.

The reality is that banning LNG exports will result in reduced CAPEX for exploration, drilling, and development.

Reply to  SteveP
February 20, 2024 6:28 am

‘The reality is that banning LNG exports will result in reduced CAPEX for exploration, drilling, and development.’

Bingo!

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 1:23 am

Again, you are being disingenuous.

You know the Australian price hike was because some idiot signed a cheap long-period delivery price with China, so Australians have to help balance the producers books.

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 1:25 am

But a US President might well be careful of the welfare of his voters.”

So now you are supporting Trump… who has the wellbeing of the US at heart….

Certainly not the Democrats, who couldn’t give two hoots about American voters or real American people…

In fact the Democrats DESPISE the average American..

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 1:27 am

And of course the second graph wouldn’t have had any influence from the shenanigans of the Covid agenda.. would it. !

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 5:06 am

Utter horst schist. When the U.S. consumed more natural gas than it produced, we were a net importer and prices were higher.

comment image

Negative net imports = Positive net exports

The relationships between production, consumption, net imports and prices aren’t particularly difficult to comprehend. While many other variables come into play, natural gas prices have had a negative correlation with the volume of gas we export since 2007, our peak year of natural gas imports.

comment image

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2022/02/11/increased-u-s-natural-gas-exports-%e2%89%a0-higher-u-s-prices/

Nick Stokes
Reply to  David Middleton
February 20, 2024 7:13 am

Your data goes to 2020 only. Here, from statista, is a plot of US and European gas prices to Dec 23. The huge discrepancies are since 2020.Prices skyrocketed in Europe; US was largely insulated. Why? Limited ability to transport gas to Europe.

Dec 2023 prices $/mmBTU were 2.53 in US, 11.53 in Europe. What producer is going to sell in the US market at that price if he can export to Europe?

comment image

Drake
Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 7:40 am

Of course everything YOU have written ignores the leftist, anti FF antics of shutting down competition of electrical generation from COAL.

IF coal was still allowed, natural gas WOULD NOT be wasted in production of base load electricity and the supply for the everyday residential user would be much greater, and the price would be much lower. Our NG bill in Las Vegas was double of last year’s due to NG supply prices.

So everyone pays more because you and your cohorts have taken one of the many available sources of heat to make electricity out of the mix. Proud of yourself??

BTW, Nick, why do you hate the poor so darn much? Everything you support just raises prices for the poor while transferring the money to your crony capitalist friends who provide you with your paycheck. Just doing the bidding of your paymasters.

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 20, 2024 9:42 am

I wrote that post two years ago, however the math hasn’t changed.

What producer is going to sell in the US market at that price if he can export to Europe?


All natural gas producers in the US are going to sell natural gas in the US market. LNG exporters buy the natural gas from US producers at US market (or lower) prices.

It costs $2-4/mcf to liquify the gas and $1-3/mcf to ship the LNG overseas.

The average US wellhead price in January 2024 was $3.18/mcf.
The average price for US LNG exports in January 2024 was $7.51/mcf.

https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/rngwhhdm.htm
https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/n9133us3m.htm

$7.51-$3.18 = $4.33

With those prices, an LNG exporter could only make a profit if the combined liquification and shipping costs were less than $4/mcf.

The reason natural gas prices are so high in Europe and Asia is that they consume a lot more natural gas than they produce.

The reason natural gas prices are so low in the US is that we produce a lot more than we consume. This is why we can export LNG without driving domestic prices through the roof. If LNG exports were banned, that supply surplus would vanish in a matter of months and prices would skyrocket.

Reply to  David Middleton
February 20, 2024 12:04 pm

Latest monthly data…

comment image

Same as it ever was.

Nick Stokes
Reply to  David Middleton
February 20, 2024 3:58 pm

This part of your graph shows how with even the limited past export facilities, the export price, driven by the Europe peak, drags up the general domestic price.

comment image

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 21, 2024 3:06 am

Not even wrong…

During the first quarter of 2022, declining U.S. natural gas production due to production freeze-offs in January and February and high net withdrawals of natural gas from storage caused the natural gas price to increase. Continued high demand for U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports in Europe and rising, weather-driven demand for natural gas in the United States led to relatively wide Henry Hub price ranges in February and March, between $4.03/MMBtu and $6.70/MMBtu. Despite these price fluctuations, the $4.67/MMBtu average spot price was lower in the first quarter of 2022 than during the rest of the year.

https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=55119#:~:text=During%20the%20first%20quarter%20of,natural%20gas%20price%20to%20increase.

The 2022 price spike was driven by abnormally cold weather in the US.

Nick Stokes
Reply to  David Middleton
February 21, 2024 4:35 am

 Continued high demand for U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports in Europe and rising, weather-driven demand for natural gas in the United States  led to relatively wide Henry Hub price ranges “

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 21, 2024 5:41 am

Are you allergic to context?

The “continued high demand” didn’t cause the price spike. The “declining U.S. natural gas production due to production freeze-offs in January and February and high net withdrawals of natural gas from storage caused the natural gas price to increase.

This was actually written in English. The disruption in production forced higher than normal withdrawals from storage. This drove up prices. When production growth resumed, natural gas prices rapidly retreated.

There was no change in demand. It was a continuation of high demand for natural gas.

Nick Stokes
Reply to  David Middleton
February 21, 2024 4:11 pm

OK, context. The EIA quotes you gave came from the discussion of Q1 2022. Here is their plot of the whole year, with my additions in red. The blip they were talking about is ringed on the left. But the big thing to notice is what happened when the Freeport LNG export facility shut down in June/July. As they say, the domestic price fell suddenly by about 40%. And that is just one terminal.

comment image

Nick Stokes
Reply to  David Middleton
February 20, 2024 3:49 pm

“The reason natural gas prices are so high in Europe and Asia is that they consume a lot more natural gas than they produce.
The reason natural gas prices are so low in the US is that we produce a lot more than we consume.”

Yes. And LNG export facilities even up the scarcity, and the price. There is no way the US can supply Asia and Europe and still have a surplus.

“$7.51-$3.18 = $4.33
With those prices, an LNG exporter could only make a profit if the combined liquification and shipping costs were less than $4/mcf.”

Isn’t that $7.51 the price paid at the export location – ie whoever gets it doesn’t have to pay shipping? That makes it a pretty good deal.

Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 21, 2024 5:43 am

That’s the average price. The actual price varies widely depending on the port of exit, the destination, the time of year and other market conditions.

https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/NG_MOVE_POE2_A_EPG0_PNG_DPMCF_M.htm

Generally speaking, the LNG traders pay the shipping costs. The will purchase cargos from the LNG exporters and sell them to customers overseas.

MarkW
Reply to  Nick Stokes
February 21, 2024 9:27 am

I love the way socialists just assume that they have the right to seize other people’s property for their own benefit.

Dena
February 19, 2024 7:54 pm

To get elected the first time, Biden made a deal with the devil. Bernie Sanders was going to upset the apple cart so to get him to stay out of it, Biden agreed to the BIDEN-SANDERS UNITY TASK FORCE RECOMMENDATIONS. Biden has been following a good deal of it with the decisions he has made but with the election coming up, he needs to prove himself worthy to the democrats for a second term.
This agreement is 110 pages of some of the most destructive political ideas the democrats have ever come up with. If you think it’s been bad so far, wait for the second term.

Reply to  Dena
February 19, 2024 8:41 pm

Biden’s a puppet, which raises the question of who’s pulling the strings? Some say Obama, but I always thought his life story / rise thought the Democrat party was indicative of someone who was also being directed by others. So, that brings me back to the question of who’s pulling the strings?

Dena
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 19, 2024 10:08 pm

He is and always has been a deal maker. He sales out to the highest bidder to get what he wants. Amtrak, Delaware Banks and anybody else that can get him power or money. He doesn’t stand for anything other than himself so you are correct to a degree. He is directed by multiple people. The Soros, Tech millionaires, China, Ukraine oil companies and even Russian big wigs.
When I look at Biden, I see the pinnacle of corruption but yet he has the gall to call Trump corrupt and evil.

Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 20, 2024 5:21 am

“So, that brings me back to the question of who’s pulling the strings?”

I’m thinking some leftwing billionaires are involved. Their billions gives them a lot of political influence. Maybe it even makes them King/President Makers.

Dena
Reply to  Tom Abbott
February 20, 2024 8:16 am

If you look at the document I referenced in the above post, it’s pretty clear it’s the progressive-socialist arm of the democrat party. Standard democrats will vote for who ever is on the ballot. The far left wants a lot for their vote. Without their support, Biden could never have been elected and will not be reelected.

JamesB_684
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 20, 2024 6:01 am

Biden’s puppet master is Xi Jiaping.

Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 20, 2024 12:09 pm

If you want to know who is pulling the strings in Delaware, look no farther than Uncle Dupie. DuPont owns Delaware and everything that comes out of Delaware.

There is a reason that over 1 million businesses incorporate in Delaware. And it’s not because it’s social activities are so progressive.

Mr Ed
February 19, 2024 8:43 pm

The country has been moving in the wrong direction for quite a while, the pace
has quickened the past few years with the Keystone Pipeline shutdown, the Nord Stream
Pipeline being blown up and now the LNG exports being halted. Add the open border
policy and we are headed for disaster.

Reply to  Mr Ed
February 20, 2024 6:39 am

Sadly, the quickened pace just confirms that the Left has teamed up with the Neo Cons. Shades of 1939.

Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 20, 2024 11:15 am

Their rhetoric & actions seem a LOT more like 1984 IMHO. The results are beginning to bear that out as well. Our Constitution is ignored as is the rule of law & we have political prisoners incarcerated by ACCUSATION with no proof of guilt or due process. They are also apparently being tortured to obtain falsified confessions. Also, those who support this sort of dictatorial government are never prosecuted for obvious & egregious illegal activities & those who oppose them are prosecuted endlessly with NO proof of guilt.

February 19, 2024 9:19 pm

Biden/Democrat Party hates America and wants to destroy it, exhibit #27653.

Alexy Scherbakoff
February 19, 2024 9:33 pm

Biden should focus on ‘A War on Dementia’.

Reply to  Alexy Scherbakoff
February 20, 2024 5:14 am

How can someone who is considered unfit to be prosecuted still be considered fit to be president?

Reply to  DavsS
February 20, 2024 11:27 am

Because the Democommies do not allow logic, common sense, reason, our laws, our Constitution, or the welfare of the United Sates to interfere with THEIR Demockracy (which looks a lot like a tyrannical dictatorship).
Besides, Biden was chosen for this job because he was mentally incompetent & could be easily managed by his handlers, could not be prosecuted where those who gave him his orders would be exposed, & could be used as a scapegoat to deflect blame from the Demo Party so they could replace him with another puppet who could continue to destroy the US & overthrow the government OF & FOR the people to replace it with a dictatorship OVER the people. He is a threefer for our enemies, Velly crever of them, no?

Reply to  J Boles
February 20, 2024 11:32 am

The narrative here is his AGE, not his disease. The actual problem is his dementia! This is a set up to get age in people’s minds to use against President Trump. Many people will not think this through & will be influenced to follow the propaganda narrative.

Reply to  Greebo
February 20, 2024 1:11 pm

Lots of “old people” are still sharp as a tack.
Trump is one of those.
Biden? He’s been as sharp as a wet noodle since he ran the first time.
That’s why they hid him in the basement using Covid as the excuse.

Kevin Kilty
February 20, 2024 6:03 am

Good luck raising the Energy IQ of America. That project ought to have begun just after World War II, and every voter should have a continuing education requirement.

February 20, 2024 9:43 am

may be the most strong-armed, authoritative action

Strange words to hear about Joe walk-about Biden who doesn’t; remember when he was elected or to what job. Who is really pulling the puppet strings?

Reply to  Andy Pattullo
February 20, 2024 11:36 am

And cannot be tried where we might discover the puppet masters. Also, they can use him as their scapegoat to dodge all blame for his actions & replace him with another puppet to finish us off. He was a brilliant choice for our enemies.

February 20, 2024 9:45 am

Somewhere there is a picture of Joe sniffing Vlad’s hair.

February 20, 2024 11:54 am

FJB. People who want to lower your standard of living are not your friends.

Kit P
February 20, 2024 5:34 pm

This LNG export ban …..

What ban?

The US is the world’s largest exporter and building new export facilities like hot cakes.

Calm down everyone. Exports are doing great.