• Natural Gas News

    Trump return will slow, not stop, US clean energy boom

Summary

A Trump 2.0 administration would likely slow offshore wind developments on federal lands and waters in favour of accelerated oil and gas activity.

by: Richard Valdmanis/Reuters

Posted in:

Complimentary, Natural Gas & LNG News, Americas, Energy Transition, Political, Elections, Tax Legislation, Environment, Regulation, Supply/Demand, News By Country, United States

Trump return will slow, not stop, US clean energy boom

 - Donald Trump's return to the White House will refocus the nation's energy policy onto maximizing oil and gas production and away from fighting climate change, but the Republican win in Tuesday's presidential elections is unlikely to dramatically slow the U.S. renewable energy boom.

That is because a Biden-era law providing a decade of lucrative subsidies for new solar, wind and other clean energy projects would be near-impossible to repeal, thanks to support from Republican states, while other levers available to the next president would only have marginal impact, analysts say.

Advertisement:

The National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago Limited (NGC) NGC’s HSSE strategy is reflective and supportive of the organisational vision to become a leader in the global energy business.

ngc.co.tt

S&P 2023

"I don't think a Trump president can slow the transition," said Ed Hirs, Energy Fellow at the University of Houston. "This is well underway."

Renewable energy sources like solar and wind are the fastest growing segments on the power grid, according to the Department of Energy, driven by federal tax credits, state renewable energy mandates, and technology advancements that have lowered their costs.

President Joe Biden in 2022 signed into law the Inflation Reduction Act guaranteeing billions of dollars of solar and wind subsidies for another decade as part of his broader effort to decarbonize the power sector by 2035 to fight climate change.

Before the election, Trump slammed the IRA as being too expensive and promised to rescind all unspent funds allocated by the law - a threat that, if accomplished, could pour cold water over the U.S. clean energy boom. 

But doing so would require lawmakers, including those whose states have benefited from IRA-related investments like solar panel factories, wind farms and other projects, to vote to repeal it.

"The jobs and the economic benefits have been so heavy in red states, it's hard to see an administration come in that says we don't like this," said Carl Fleming, a partner at law firm McDermott Will & Emery, who advised the Biden White House on renewable energy policy.

Many of Trump's allies also benefit from the IRA through their investments in clean energy technologies, Reuters has previously reported.

Fleming said Trump could, however, slow things down around the margins by hindering federal agencies that deliver IRA grants and loans, or by reducing federal leasing for things like offshore wind.

"You could see a new administration come in and they can very quickly begin to cut budgets or restrict budgets or restrict the freedom of agencies to do certain things that are tied to funding," he said.

"But I think that's a smaller subset of the larger renewables market that's really relying on those, so I don't think it would have a shocking effect."

The Biden administration has rushed to ensure it spends the majority of available grant funding under the IRA before a new president arrives, Reuters has previously reported.

One way Trump could slow the transition is through executive action by changing public lands leasing, analysts said. The Biden administration had sought to expand lease auctions for offshore wind in federal waters, along with solar and wind on land.

"I think you would see more preference given to fossil fuel extraction on public lands and waters," said Tony Dutzik, associate director and senior policy analyst at Frontier Group, a non-profit sustainability think tank.

That could have an outsized impact on the offshore wind industry, which aims to site projects in federal waters. Most onshore solar and wind projects are located on private property, as is the vast majority of oil and gas drilling.

Trump has said he intends to end the offshore wind industry "on day one," arguing it is too expensive and poses a threat to whales and seabirds, a dramatic policy reversal after his first administration supported offshore wind development.

Bernstein Research said Trump is likely to enact a moratorium on new offshore wind lease sales.

Meanwhile, U.S. fossil fuel production is likely to look much the same under Trump, experts said. The U.S. has already become the world's largest oil and gas producer, under the watch of Biden, thanks to a drilling boom in fields like the Permian Basin under Texas and New Mexico.

The production boom started under Obama and has continued through the Trump and Biden presidencies. Even so, Trump's campaign has sought to claim credit, saying his efforts to slash regulatory red tape during his 2017-2021 term paved the way, and arguing he could further expand U.S. fossil fuel production in a second term by rolling back Biden's climate initiatives. 

"Presidents can make a lot of noise about plans for U.S. oil and gas, but ultimately it's individuals and companies responding to prices of a global commodity that make the decisions on when to drill," said Jesse Jones, head of North American Upstream at Energy Aspects.

Dan Eberhart, Trump donor and CEO of oilfield services company Canary, LLC, said he supports Trump's encouragement of increased oil and gas drilling, saying it could further lower energy prices for businesses and consumers.

He added he would also welcome a move by Trump to once again withdraw the United States from international climate cooperation, like he did in his first term, arguing other big greenhouse gas emitters were not doing enough.

"The Paris accord was aspirational and meaningless if China and India don't participate," he said, referring to a landmark U.N. deal in 2015 to limit global warming. 

(Additional reporting by Alexandra Ulmer in Washington and Georgina McCartney in Houston; Editing by Timothy Gardner, Marguerita Choy, David Evans and Andrea Ricci)