Bloomberg would not ban U.S. oil exports in climate plan, unlike rival
Democrats
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[February 28, 2020]
By Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Media billionaire
Michael Bloomberg would allow the United States to keep exporting crude
oil overseas if he is elected president, his campaign says, unlike his
top Democratic rivals who have pledged to ban oil exports immediately to
fight climate change.
The stance could help the former New York City mayor gain votes in
states like Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana that have benefited from
booming U.S. oil exports since the Obama administration lifted a 40-year
ban in 2015.
But it risks upsetting the Democratic party’s progressive wing, which is
pushing for sweeping measures to quickly reduce greenhouse gas
emissions.
Texas, one of the biggest U.S. states, is among the 14 voting in the
March 3 Super Tuesday Democratic primary process. Its ports handle the
lion’s share of America’s roughly 3 million barrels of daily exports,
valued at around $65 billion in 2019.
Bloomberg’s campaign told Reuters that while he has an aggressive
overall policy https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-climatechange-factbox/factbox-climate-change-plans-of-the-leading-us-democratic-candidates-idUSKBN1ZL2TT
to fight climate change, he believes re-imposing the export ban would
hurt the economy without providing climate benefits, since lost U.S.
shipments would be replaced by oil from producers like Saudi Arabia and
Russia.
"Mike will not reinstate the ban," Bloomberg spokeswoman Daphne Wang
told Reuters in an email.
"After President Obama lifted the ban, for the first time in decades,
the world became less dependent on Middle East and Russian oil and gas.
Mike would be reluctant to take actions that could upset that balance."
Bloomberg’s position makes him an outlier among Democratic presidential
hopefuls.
Progressive candidates like Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth
Warren, and billionaire Tom Steyer have vowed to re-instate the ban if
elected as part of broader plans to transition the U.S. economy away
from fossil fuels.
Other candidates like former Vice President Joe Biden, Senator Amy
Klobuchar, and former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg have yet
to speak publicly on the issue and their campaigns declined repeated
requests for comment.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg speaks to
supporters at a Get Out the Vote rally in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
U.S., February 27, 2020. REUTERS/Nick Oxford
The ban was initially imposed in the 1970s when the United States
produced much less crude oil than it consumed. Since then, the
country has become a top global oil producer thanks to a
technology-led drilling boom that began more than a decade ago, a
trend Republican President Donald Trump has embraced.
Trump has repeatedly downplayed the threat of global warming and
voiced doubt about the science that shows climate change is driven
by human use of fossil fuels.
Environmental groups like Greenpeace and Oil Change International
have been lobbying Democratic hopefuls hard in support of
reinstating the crude oil export ban, saying this could cut
emissions by as much as 73 to 165 million metric tons of
CO2-equivalent each year - the equivalent to closing between 19 and
42 coal-fired power plants.
"Reinstating the ban would also send a strong signal to energy
investors that the fossil fuel era is drawing to a close," Oil
Change International said in a policy briefing with reporters last
month.
But some analysts are not convinced the move would have an impact.
They suggest that a more effective approach would be policies
targeting reductions in fossil fuel demand, like a carbon tax or
renewable energy mandates.
"You are just shifting where the production is coming from and
transferring revenue, jobs and security to a foreign country," said
Amy Meyers Jaffe, a fellow at the Council of Foreign Relations.
(Editing by Richard Valdmanis and David Gregorio)
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