Trump to sign order seeking to clear gas
pipeline hurdles: Kudlow
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[April 04, 2019]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - White House
economic adviser Larry Kudlow on Wednesday said the Trump administration
would soon issue an executive order that would open the door for more
natural gas pipelines and exports of liquefied natural gas, or LNG.
The administration, which is pushing a policy it calls energy dominance,
has been considering an order that would push back against states,
including New York, that have blocked interstate natural gas pipelines.
Kudlow said the executive order would open the way for pipelines and LNG
at an event hosted by the Christian Science Monitor news outlet.
New York has blocked pipelines that would take natural gas from
Pennsylvania to New England, which means the region sometimes needs
imports of LNG. Early last year, a tanker carrying LNG from a project in
Russia's Arctic arrived in Boston Harbor to satisfy demand during a cold
snap.
It was unclear how the order would overrule the authority of states to
rule on pipelines.
Several politicians in New York, including Governor Andrew Cuomo, have
said they want energy companies to focus more on renewable power sources
and energy efficiency, instead of building more gas and other fossil
fuel-fired power plants and infrastructure.
New York State in recent years blocked the construction of several
pipelines that would transport fracked natural gas from the Marcellus
shale in Pennsylvania to New England, including Williams Cos Inc's
Constitution and Northeast Supply Enhancement and National Fuel Gas Co's
(NFG) Northern Access.
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President Donald Trump arrives to speak at the National Republican
Congressional Committee Annual Spring Dinner in Washington, U.S.,
April 2, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
In those cases, New York regulators denied the pipelines on
environmental grounds. Trump has attempted to use an executive order
to jumpstart TransCanada Inc's long-delayed Keystone XL crude oil
pipeline, signing an order just two days after assuming office in
2017. But that did not save the pipeline from getting bogged down in
the courts and last week he issued another order seeking to breathe
life into the project.
Meanwhile an independent federal agency has taken some steps that
could help gas pipelines in New York.
The U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) determined last
year that New York regulators waived their right to decide on a
water quality certification for NFG's Northern Access project
because the state waited too long.
FERC this week denied New York's request to rehear that decision.
Williams has made a similar argument about the Constitution
pipeline.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Timothy Gardner; additional reporting
by Scott DiSavino in New York; editing by Franklin Paul, Jonathan
Oatis and Susan Thomas)
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