The lawsuit was filed in federal court in Lake Charles,
Louisiana, by the Republican attorneys general of a coalition of
states including Texas, Louisiana and Florida that claim the
U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) pause on exports will harm the
U.S. economy and undermine efforts to supply foreign allies in
Europe with steady supplies of LNG as the region seeks to wean
itself off piped gas from Russia.
The Biden administration said in January the pause will allow
officials to review its process for analyzing economic and
environmental impacts of projects seeking approval to export LNG
to Europe and Asia where the fuel is in high demand.
The states said the pause on new approvals for LNG exports
oversteps DOE’s authority under the Natural Gas Act, which they
said requires the agency to affirmatively show projects are
inconsistent with the public interest before denying
applications.
The states also argued the ban jeopardizes billions of dollars
in investments planned to build export facilities.
The DOE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The initial review is expected to last months.
The last U.S. review of LNG export projects was in 2018 when
export capacity was 4 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd).
Capacity has since tripled and is set to shoot higher by 2030
with projects under construction.
Environmentalists and youth groups, an important part of
Democratic President Joe Biden's base, had urged the
administration over the last year to slow down or stop approvals
for LNG export projects, which they claim can harm local
communities with pollution and will lock in global reliance on
climate change-causing fossil fuels for decades.
Domestic industries including chemical, steel and agriculture
businesses, have also opposed unrestricted exports, which they
say can raise concerns about the reliability of U.S. domestic
supply and fuel prices.
Before the lawsuit was filed, efforts by Republicans in Congress
to strip the DOE’s power to approve the exports and leave the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission with the sole
responsibility for approving LNG projects had stalled.
(Reporting by Clark Mindock in New York and Kanishka Singh in
Washington; Editing by Dan Whitcomb, Alexia Garamfalvi and Jamie
Freed)
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