Anonymous ID: 1fbe18 May 27, 2022, 5:57 p.m. No.16353677   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Republican States Fight Back Against Biden’s Stealth Attacks On Oil, Gas Industry

Thomas Catenacci

May 27, 2022 6:53 PM ET

A group of 21 Republican attorneys general argued Friday that the Biden administration’s move to restrict oil and gas project permitting is the latest attack on the industry.

“Apparently President Biden doesn’t think the price of gas is high enough,” said Republican Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen, who spearheaded the effort. “This is just going to keep exacerbating energy production and gas prices in America. This is nothing but more and more red tape.”

“This so-called review won’t address the real concerns facing our citizens—prominently, historically high energy prices,” the Republican states’ letter stated. “It will instead inject unnecessary, duplicative, and inequitable red tape into an already bureaucratically laden process.”

A coalition of 21 Republican-led states implored the Biden administration not to axe a key federal permit for oil and gas projects in a filing published Friday.

 

The states argued that a recently-announced review of the permit is unnecessary and increases fossil fuel industry uncertainty, according to the document obtained by The Daily Caller News Foundation. The letter was filed in response to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ (USACE) announcement on March 28 that it would conduct a formal review of Nationwide Permit 12 (NWP 12), which isn’t set to expire until 2026, to assess its potential environmental justice and climate change impacts.

 

“Apparently President Biden doesn’t think the price of gas is high enough,” Republican Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen, who spearheaded the effort, told TheDCNF in an interview. “This is just going to keep exacerbating energy production and gas prices in America. This is nothing but more and more red tape.” (RELATED: Biden Cancels More Oil And Gas Leases As Fuel Prices Skyrocket)

 

The NWP 12 permit, authorized under the Clean Water Act, allows oil and gas developers to bypass a lengthy government environmental review if their project has minimal climate or waterway impacts. The USACE’s March announcement stated that the administration was interested in implementing “potential off-ramps” that would force more fossil fuel projects to require a full review instead of using NWP 12.

 

The agency said it had opted for a formal review of the permit in accordance with a climate-focused executive order President Joe Biden signed on his first day in office. The executive order directed the Department of Defense to review the Trump administration’s last-minute renewal of NWP 12 on Jan. 13, 2021, which is also the subject of an ongoing lawsuit filed by an environmental group in which Montana, fossil fuel industry groups and business groups have intervened on behalf of the defendants.

 

“This so-called review won’t address the real concerns facing our citizens—prominently, historically high energy prices,” the Republican states’ letter stated. “It will instead inject unnecessary, duplicative, and inequitable red tape into an already bureaucratically laden process.”

 

“Far from alleviating our current crisis, the Corps appears poised to take measures that will undermine NWP 12’s purpose and further jeopardize the Nation’s energy security and prosperity,” it continued. “Rather than re-review NWP 12 for the second time in two years, the Corps should instead return to issuing individual and general permits in accordance with its statutory duty.”

 

The average price of gasoline in the U.S. hit $4.59 per gallon Friday, slightly less than the all-time record set Thursday, while natural gas prices remained near multi-year highs, according to market data. Fossil fuel industry groups and Republicans have accused the Biden administration of unleashing an assault on new oil and gas development amid the global energy crisis.

 

“This administration is more interested in pandering to their left-coast elites than they are at actually looking at how to solve the energy problem we’ve got right now,” Knudsen added. “They’re going to weaponize the Clean Water Act, they’re going to weaponize the Endangered Species Act, they’re gonna weaponize whatever piece of federal legislation they can to further this agenda.”

 

“Why on God’s green earth would you, as an energy company or a pipeline company, want to risk your stakeholders’ capital and put millions upon millions of dollars on the line to put a project in place when you’re very likely going to get jerked around and have permits revoked or have bureaucracy thrown in front of you at every turn by this administration?” he told TheDCNF….

 

https://dailycaller.com/2022/05/27/austin-knudsen-joe-biden-fossil-fuel-industry-permits/

Anonymous ID: 1fbe18 May 27, 2022, 6:04 p.m. No.16353713   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3719 >>3731 >>3783

US Govt To Blame For Burning 312,320 Acres In New Mexico

Mary RookeMay 27, 2022

The U.S. Forest Services (USFS) said Friday it had started two fires that devastated thousands of acres of land and hundreds of homes in New Mexico.

The agency said it started the April 6 Hermits Peak Fire and the April 19 Calf Canyon Fire, reported Reuters. The two fires combined into the largest-ever wildfire in New Mexico history.

 

“The Hermits Peak Fire began April 6 as a result of the Las Dispensas prescribed fire on the Pecos/Las Vegas Ranger District of the Santa Fe National Forest. Although forecasted weather conditions were within parameters for the prescribed fire, unexpected erratic winds in the late afternoon caused multiple spot fires that spread outside the project boundary,” the U.S. Forest Service summary of the Hermits Peak Fire stated.

 

The massive wildfire burned over 312,320 acres of New Mexico landscape, including mountains, forests and valleys, reported Reuters.

 

​Democratic New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham urged the U.S. government to take full responsibility for the destruction of property brought by the wildfires.

 

“The pain and suffering of New Mexicans caused by the actions of the U.S. Forest Service – an agency that is intended to be a steward of our lands – is unfathomable,” Lujan Grisham said in her statement. “This is a first step toward the federal government taking full responsibility for the largest wildfire in state history, which has destroyed hundreds of homes, displaced tens of thousands of New Mexicans, and cost the state and local governments millions of dollars.”

 

​The price to fight the wildfires is $132 million, with those costs increasing by around $5 million every day, Lujan Grisham’s statement reported. The USFS will pay for 100% of the fire suppression costs, according to her statement.

 

Lujan Grisham said the state is still asking President Joe Biden to instruct the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) to pay for “a broad range of fire-related recovery efforts” not covered by the USFS, including debris removal.

 

There is a 90-day pause on prescribed fire operations on National Forest System lands due to an “extreme wildfire risk conditions in the field,” the USFS announced in a May 20 ​​statement.

 

https://dailycaller.com/2022/05/27/us-government-burning-312320-acres-new-mexico-forest-fire/

Anonymous ID: 1fbe18 May 27, 2022, 6:11 p.m. No.16353749   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Kevin Costner& MW

@modernwest

 

Devastated to hear the news of Ray Liotta’s passing. While he leaves an incredible legacy, he’ll always be “Shoeless Joe Jackson” in my heart.What happened that moment in the film was real. God gave us that stunt. Now God has Ray.

 

https://twitter.com/modernwest/status/1529924892564635654