Biden’s natural gas export freeze probed by US House committee

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Representative Jeff Duncan, a Republican from South Carolina and chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy, Climate, and Grid Security, left, during a hearing in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. The US emphasized to importers of liquefied natural gas that the Biden administration's freeze on new approvals for exports is a pause that does not threaten the flow of vital energy supplies. Photographer: Valerie Plesch/Bloomberg

The House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology is asking the Energy Department to justify why a moratorium on project approvals is needed.

PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Follow topic:

WASHINGTON – A House committee in the US is probing the Biden administration’s decision to pause liquefied natural gas export approvals, asking the Energy Department to justify why a moratorium on project approvals is needed while the agency conducts a study that could take more than a year. 

In a letter sent to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology asks why the department’s study on how LNG shipments affect climate change, the economy and national security is needed, and how the analysis will differ from previous studies on the issue. The letter, sent on Feb 7, requests a briefing from the agency by March 1. 

“The committee has not received or been notified of any scientific justification which would warrant a pause in authorisations or a long-term re-analysis of US LNG exports,” wrote Republican members of the committee, led by its chair, Oklahoma Republican Frank D. Lucas. “The previous studies were completed without any pause in the permitting process, and it is unclear, beyond a political agenda, why one is needed now.”

The Biden administration announced the export licence moratorium in January amid mounting opposition to LNG export terminals from environmental groups, who fear the facilities could lock in fossil fuel use for decades to come. The administration said the government’s existing analysis was outdated and did not reflect evolving information about how much methane – the prime ingredient in natural gas – could warm the atmosphere.

The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, led by West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin, is also probing the administration’s decision and will hold a hearing on the issue on Feb 8 at which Deputy Secretary of Energy David Turk is slated to appear. BLOOMBERG

See more on