State Department

G7 Leaders Meet To Discuss Ukraine During Nuclear Summit

Editor’s note: This post has been updated since publication. In June, Deputy Secretary Daniel Poneman traveled to Japan for the third meeting of the Bilateral Commission on Civil Nuclear Cooperation (BLC). The BLC was launched by President Obama and Prime Minister Noda during their meeting in Washington in April 2012, recognizing that the need for… Keep reading →

Oil Boom Shifts The Landscape Of Rural North Dakota

The folks at the Energy Collective hosted an interesting webchat discussion of the Keystone XL pipeline the other day, a good part of which focused on greenhouse gas emissions from the project and oil sands development – identified by President Obama as a key basis for his pipeline decision. The big takeaway here: Even at the high end of… Keep reading →


The State Department released the latest documents in one of the highest-profile and highest-stakes projects in the North American energy sector today.

The Draft Supplementary Environmental Impact Statement was released March 1, 2013, and includes extensive information on the project, which has attracted the ire of a wide swathe the environmental community and been treated by the oil and gas business as a litmus test of the Obama Administration’s commitment to securing energy supply and energy security through increased development. Keep reading →

Both presidential candidates are trumpeting energy independence in this year’s election. But the path they describe to get there is not the same, especially when it comes to fossil fuels.

Their website slogans encapsulate the differences. President Barack Obama’s is “Energy and the Environment;” Republican nominee Mitt Romney “Energy: Pro-Jobs, Pro-Market, Pro-American.”

Who could argue with either?

“The United States has always relied on a diversity of energy sources and no serious analyst believes that will change any time soon. But that does not mean that all energy policies are good. The devil is in the details,” said Frank Laird, associate professor at the Josef Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver.

Here are some of the details on where the Presidential candidates stand.

Romney’s plan focuses heavily on oil and gas and calls for fast-tracked permits and reduced regulation to make it easier to develop energy projects. He would relinquish to the states control over development on federal lands. He proposes a five-year leasing program to “aggressively” pursue offshore energy development, beginning in Virginia and the Carolinas.

While Romney also addresses renewable energy, calling for easier siting rules and basic research funding, his focus is clearly on fossil fuels.

Arno Harris, CEO of Recurrent Energy and board chairman of the Solar Energy Industries Association, charges that Romney is pursuing an “archaic” policy of slash and burn. “Slash renewables and focus on things you can burn: coal and gas and oil.”

Meanwhile, Obama emphasizes independence from foreign oil and pursuit of clean energy and efficiency. Obama’s critics paint him as obstructing fossil fuels.

“The Obama approach is to put obstacles in the way of American energy self-sufficiency rather than support the oil industry’s efforts to make the US one of the top oil and natural gas producers in the world,” said Chris Faulkner, CEO of Dallas-based Breitling Oil and Gas.

But Obama’s campaign points to the dramatic expansion of oil and gas supply on his watch. U.S. crude oil production reached its highest level last year since 2003; the nation became the world largest producer of natural gas; oil imports dropped to their lowest since 1995, as a share of consumption, according to his campaign website.

Does Obama deserve credit – or the market?

“He certainly deserves credit for not having it run off the rails. There are a lot of things that a politician can do to screw these things up,” said Andrew Holland, senior fellow for energy and climate at the American Security Project.

Both parties would like to lay claim to the US energy supply boom – but probably cannot, according to Greg Croft, an earth and environmental sciences lecturer at Saint Mary’s College of California.

“There isn’t a lot of evidence for federal policy having anything to do with the increases in gas and oil production. The shale gas boom began with the Barnett Shale. This was developed by private operators on private land in Texas and most regulation of oil and gas drilling takes place at a state level,” he said.

Obama’s position on coal has stirred even more rancor, as Romney heavily courts miners and paints Obama as coal’s enemy. Over the next five years, the US is expected to lose 8.5 percent of its coal-fired generation to retirement, a quadrupling over the previous five years, according to the US Energy Information Administration. Both the Romney camp and the industry hold Obama’s environmental policy responsible – the United Mine Workers of America, which endorsed Obama in his 2008 bid, has since called him “tone deaf” to the needs of coal miners.

But just as Obama may be getting too much credit for the oil and gas boom, he may be getting too much blame for coal’s bust, particularly given the drop in natural gas prices, say industry observers.

“It’s the old Herbert Hoover line – the President gets blamed for the rain,” Holland said. “This reputation he has of an anti-coal guy is a little unfair. Coal has been a victim of a significant free market turn away from it. It is no longer cost effective for a utility to build a new coal plant.”

Another clear distinction between the candidates comes out in their energy tax proposals. Obama wants to eliminate $40 billion in tax breaks for fossil fuels, while Romney opposes the extension of wind power’s federal tax production tax credit.

Less clear is the difference in their positions on TransCanada’s Keystone XL pipeline, proposed to move Canadian synthetic crude oil to refineries in the US. Romney says he supports the project; Obama refused to sign a Presidential Permit for the line in January. But he said in a statement released by the White House that his decision was “not a judgment on the merits of the pipeline.” Instead, he charged that Congressional Republicans rushed the process, so the State Department didn’t have the time to fully review the application. TransCanada has since revised and re-filed the application and expects a decision in first quarter of 2013.

So will the election outcome mean more, less or the same when it comes to fossil fuels? Romney has positioned himself as the candidate for the future of fossil fuels; Obama as the leader presiding over today’s oil and gas boom. Market forces are the wildcard.

This is the second article in a four-part Breaking Energy series by Elisa Wood on energy and the presidential election.


President Obama upped the ante with Republicans Wednesday, saying their “rushed and arbitrary” 60-day deadline for finding whether TransCanada’s controversial Keystone XL pipeline is in the public interest was too short, and telling Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to reject the project.

Obama specified his decision was not made on the merits of the 1,700-mile pipeline from Alberta, Canada to a Nebraska terminal and then on to the Gulf of Mexico. The State Department said, “The Department’s denial of the permit application does not preclude any subsequent permit application or applications for similar projects.” Keep reading →


The State Department is eliminating 21,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions annually– and looking for more — as part of its worldwide power and systems management initiative to eliminate power waste across 100 percent of its workstation computers. Projected to save millions annually when fully implemented, the initiative is designed to comply with OMB sustainability and energy management mandates, plus support the Department’s Greening Diplomacy Initiative. Currently State has 88,986 desktops at 468 worldwide sites – comprised of domestic facilities, embassies, consulates, and passport agencies. Gerry Caron, Branch Chief, Enterprise Management Systems, Information Resource Management Bureau told Breaking Gov that being a geographically diverse agency meant the Department faces multiple problems and issues.


The US “is on the cusp of an energy boom that is already creating hundreds of thousands of jobs, revitalizing entire communities, and reinvigorating American manufacturing,” said US Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Thomas Donohue as he laid out the Chamber’s priorities for 2012.

In his annual “State of American Business” report, delivered Thursday in the Italianate Hall of Flags in the Chamber’s Lafayette Square headquarters, Donohue highlighted energy first as a sector offering vast promise in jobs and revenue to help revitalize the US economy, but only if domestic resources are developed. Keep reading →

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