New U.S. environmental chief says agency
can also be pro-jobs
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[February 22, 2017]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The new head of the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said on Tuesday that America need
not choose between jobs and the environment, in a nod to the energy
industry, as the White House prepares executive orders that could come
as soon as this week to roll back Obama-era regulation.
"I believe that we as an agency, and we as a nation, can be both
pro-energy and jobs, and pro-environment," Scott Pruitt
said in his first address to staff. "We don't have to choose between the
two."
Critics of the agency have complained that regulations ushered in by
former Democratic President Barack Obama have killed thousands of energy
jobs by restricting carbon emissions and limiting areas open to coal
mining and oil drilling.
Democrats, environmental advocates and many of the EPA's current and
former staff worry President Donald Trump's appointment of Pruitt
signals a reversal in America's progress toward cleaner air and water
and fighting global climate change.
Both Trump and Pruitt have expressed doubts about climate change, and
Trump vowed during his 2016 presidential campaign to pull the United
States out of a global pact to fight it. The Republican president has
promised to slash environmental rules to help the drilling and mining
industries, but without hurting air and water quality.
Pruitt sued the agency he now leads more than a dozen times while
attorney general of Oklahoma to stop federal rules. He did not mention
climate change in his 12-minute speech at the EPA's headquarters in
Washington.
He struck a conciliatory tone in the address, saying he would "listen,
learn and lead" and that he valued the contributions of career staff.
Trump is expected to sign executive orders aimed at reshaping
environmental policy as early as this week. Those orders would lift a
ban on coal mining leases on federal lands and ease greenhouse gas
emissions curbs on electric utilities, according to a report by the
Washington Post.
They would also require changes to Obama's Waters of the United States
rule that details which waterways fall under federal protection, the
report said.
The White House did not immediately reply to a request for comment on
the Washington Post story.
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Director of Environmental Protection Agency Scott Pruitt is
sworn in by Justice Samuel Alito at the Executive Office in
Washington, U.S., February 17, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
ENERGY TIES
Pruitt was confirmed by the U.S. Senate last week after contentious
hearings that focused on his record as the top prosecutor of the
oil- and gas-producing state of Oklahoma.
Democrats had sought to delay Pruitt's confirmation over questions
about his ties to the oil industry. Some 800 former EPA staff also
signed a letter urging senators to reject him, and about 30 current
EPA staff joined a protest set up in Chicago by the Sierra Club
environmental group.
In Oklahoma, a state judge ruled last week that Pruitt would have to
turn over emails between his office and energy companies by Tuesday
after a watchdog group, the Center for Media and Democracy, sued for
their release.
The judge will review and perhaps hold back some of the emails
before releasing them, a court clerk said.
Nicole Cantello, a representative of the union that represents EPA
workers, said that despite Pruitt's record, she was hoping for the
best.
"One would hope that the administrator would learn about what we do
and would then not treat as lightly the EPA's mission and
accomplishments, and what it is required to do under the statutes,"
she said.
The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, said it looked
forward to working with Pruitt, the administration and Congress "on
policies that will keep energy affordable, create jobs, and
strengthen our economy."
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing
by Alistair Bell and Peter Cooney)
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