Does Biden’s Permitting Pause Squeeze U.S. LNG Exports? Experts Say No

To hear what impact the decision has on U.S. LNG exports, Curtis Tate spoke with Sam Reynolds and Ana Maria Jaller-Makarewicz of the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

A recent decision by the Biden administration to suspend permitting for new export terminals for liquefied natural gas has drawn criticism from West Virginia lawmakers. 

To hear what impact the decision has on U.S. LNG exports, Curtis Tate spoke with Sam Reynolds and Ana Maria Jaller-Makarewicz of the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, an organization that favors a faster transition away from fossil fuels.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Tate: What does the pause on permitting for new LNG export terminals really mean?

Reynolds: Just for perspective, the U.S. is currently the largest global LNG exporter worldwide, we export about 86 million tons of liquefied natural gas a year. That’s more than Qatar and Australia, which are the next two largest. The U.S. currently has five projects under construction to export more LNG that would nearly double that amount over the remainder of the decade. Now, the U.S. pause on permitting, does not affect any of the existing or under construction projects. So that’s really important for consumers around the world to know that the U.S. is still on pace to nearly double its export capacity, and it’s already the largest worldwide. 

Right now, in Asia, the U.S.’s largest customers are Japan and South Korea, and a lot of these new export facilities in the U.S. are justified under the impression that our customers need more of this LNG. In fact, if you look at these two largest buyers, Japan and South Korea, both are reducing their natural gas and LNG demand, and actually quite dramatically. So in Japan, LNG exports peaked in 2014 and have declined ever since. And they actually fell 8 percent last year, which is more than double the rate of decline in previous years. Japan is upping its nuclear and renewables capacity, and actually doesn’t want any more of this very expensive fuel, that is LNG. It’s opting for cheaper resources. and South Korea is very similar. LNG demand fell 4 percent last year, as it brings on cheaper energy sources like renewables and nuclear. 

Tate: What about Europe? Didn’t Putin’s invasion of Ukraine cause European countries to become more reliant on U.S. LNG?

Jaller-Makarewicz: So while the U.S. was thinking, ‘Oh, Europe is in a big crisis, and we really need to step in to supply all the LNG that they need,’ at the same time Europe was working on their strategies to reduce gas demand. So what we see today, at the beginning of 2024, is a different reality than at the beginning of 2022. So what we have been saying in Europe, and I think that’s also the concern for the U.S. is that we need to analyze today’s conditions. For example, the gas demand in Europe reduced 20 percent In the last two years. Nobody could expect that. We could agree in certain instances, there’s some part of gas demand destruction. Part of it. But a great majority of it has been implementation of energy efficiency measures on gas demand management, on renewables. The mentality in Europe has changed now. 

Tate: Can countries turn to other sources for LNG?

Reynolds: The growth, if you look at the growth markets for LNG demand, where is demand actually increasing? And the largest sources of growth for this product are in South Asia, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Southeast Asia, Vietnam, Philippines, Thailand, Singapore. Now, these are much more price sensitive countries, they don’t have the same amount of wealth that Europe, Japan and South Korea have to spend on this relatively expensive product that is U.S. LNG. 

And in fact, our main competitors for supplying these markets are Qatar and Australia, which are much cheaper sources of supply to this region. So they’re going to be making an economic decision about where to buy LNG. And actually, since the pause, we’ve seen a spate of deals announced with Qatar to buy more of their LNG. So it’s not necessarily that these countries are turning away from the U.S. specifically, because of the Biden pause. But there is an economic calculation to be made. Qatari LNG can often come in five to six times cheaper than U.S. LNG, which has to be shipped all the way around the world.

Jaller-Makarewicz: So I want to add something here. When the crisis started in Europe, Europe realized the dangers of depending so much on one supplier. That was the main problem that Europe was facing. So I don’t think they’re going to allow the same thing to happen. They are saying we need diversification of sources. So there will be up to a point where they will say that’s it. We need to diversify. We cannot accept more U.S. LNG, because we need to have more sources supplying the gas and LNG to Europe. So that also comes into play. Europe is under a lot of pressure for not repeating the mistakes of the past.

Tate: Has the Russia-Ukraine war accelerated the adoption of renewables and energy efficiency in Europe?

Jaller-Makarewicz: I can say that. And for example, in energy efficiency, before we were not talking about that topic, and suddenly, look, in September of 2022, I was in Madrid for an event. And it was hot. And they had a law that they couldn’t have the air conditioners, they had to have them up to a certain level, because they didn’t want to use more energy. We also got lots of talk here, the thermostats in the winter would have just one degree less, so they started to think about us as consumers, we could also do something to reduce it with our consumption. And it was not talked about like that before. Now it was decided, we need to speed up the renewables, we need to reduce all the problems with the bureaucracy and all that to allow those tax breaks to come into operation. So they accelerated that. I can say that they accelerated that.

Manchin: U.S. Can Produce More Oil To Offset Russian Imports

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin drew big bipartisan support for his bill to ban oil imports from Russia.

The Ban Russian Energy Imports Act would block imports of crude oil, petroleum products, liquefied natural gas and coal.

Manchin’s bill aims to punish Russia’s Vladimir Putin for waging war against Ukraine.

Manchin said U.S. energy producers could make up for it by increasing production to where it was before the coronavirus.

“The United States of America in 2019 produced 12 million barrels a day – 12.3 – we’re down to 11.2 because of COVID,” he said. “The market dropped off. We have no problem at all ramping back up with what we already have ready to go.”

U.S. consumers have already seen a spike in energy prices from last year because of a sharp rise in demand as the economy recovered from the pandemic.

A disruption in energy supplies could drive prices even higher.

Manchin, Capito, McKinley Weigh in on Trump-Putin Meeting

A day after President Donald Trump’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, most of West Virginia’s congressional delegation has weighed in on what many critics saw as a lost opportunity to condemn the foreign leader for his country’s role in interfering with the United States’ 2016 election.

President Trump drew criticism from many senators and congressional representatives of both parties following remarks at a joint press conference Monday, July 16 with Putin. When asked who was to blame for the interference, Trump said he holds “both countries responsible.”

The U.S. President also said that Putin denied any involvement in the operations of the election interference.

Trump and Putin’s meeting in Helsinki came just days after an indictment from U.S. Department of Justice special counsel Robert Mueller charges 12 Russian agents of interfering in the 2016 presidential election.

In a written statement issued Tuesday, Sen. Joe Manchin — a Democrat — acknowledged Russian meddling in the election and argued it is not a partisan matter up for debate.

“Let me be perfectly clear, the Russian government is not our friend. They interfered in our 2016 election and their cyberattacks continue to this day. The brave men and women in our intelligence community have concluded this through a fact-based investigation,” Manchin said. “As a member of the Intelligence Committee, I have seen the clear evidence of what the Russians have done and continue to do to meddle in our elections. This is an issue that both Democrats and Republicans are united on.”

Manchin also quoted a statement from Republican Sen. John McCain, who issued a scathing criticism of President Trump on Monday. However, Manchin also pointed to comments from Republican sens. Lindsay Graham, of South Carolina, and Bob Corker, of Tennessee.

Graham said “meddling & collusion are NOT the same thing,” while Corker said Russia “definitely interfered in our election. That’s not debatable.”

“These are not political, partisan words – these are words of concerned elected officials united in the defense of our country, our intelligence community, and in agreement with the facts. It’s incumbent on any President to stand up to our adversaries and confront them when they attack our country,” Manchin said.

“We fought and won the Cold War by never giving ground to the Soviet Union, and we need the same strength today. I stand by the analysis of our country’s intelligence community, my Republican and Democratic colleagues and the Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats. This is not political, it’s simply patriotic,” he added.

 

Credit Courtesy Photos
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From left to right: Sen. Joe Manchin, Rep. David McKinley, Re[. Alex Mooney, Rep. Evan Jenkins, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito. Requests for comment from Reps. Mooney and Jenkins on Monday’s meeting between Trump and Putin went unanswered.

Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito noted support of funding for election security, which was passed as part of the March 2018 omnibus spending bill. Capito chairs the Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Subcommittee, which secured $380 million for that project — of which West Virginia was granted $3.6 million from the appropriation to improve election security.

“I trust our intelligence community in their assessment of Russia’s attempts to influence the 2016 election,” Senator Capito said. “Preserving the integrity of our electoral system is critical to our democracy. That is why I led efforts as chairman of the Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Subcommittee to include funds to improve U.S. election security in the government funding legislation that became law in March. Russia is an adversary of the United States, and we must continue efforts to hold them accountable.”

 

Since 2016, the West Virginia Secretary of State’s office has deployed National Guard assets to monitor computer systems in hopes to prevent election hacking. 

 

Federal officials have confirmed that Russian-backed hackers probed election-related systems in at least 21 states in the 2016 election, although West Virginia was not one of them.

 

Rep. David McKinley, a Republican who represents West Virginia’s 1st Congressional District, pointed to actions taken by the Trump Administration in which the U.S. has attempted to combat Russian interference.

 

“The House Intelligence Committee and several American intelligence agencies have concluded that Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S. elections, just as they have done in many other countries. I disagree with the President’s statement,” McKinley said. “However, we should also weigh these poorly chosen words at a press conference against actions the Administration has taken against Russia, including imposing tough sanctions, expelling diplomats, and providing weapons to Ukraine.”

One such measure was the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act, for which McKinley — and the rest of the state’s delegation — voted in favor.

Last year, Trump signed CAATSA but called the measure “seriously flawed” because it limited his ability to implement sanctions without congressional approval. Trump also failed to hit a congressionally mandated deadline in January to act on the bill — which would have allowed him to impose new sanctions on Russia for meddling in the 2016 election.

Reps. Alex Mooney and Evan Jenkins — of the state’s 2nd and 3rd Congressional Districts, respectively — did not return requests for comment.

None of the state’s five-member delegation acknowledged requests for interviews on the matter.

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