Senate confirms Doug Burgum as interior secretary after Trump tasked him
to boost drilling
Send a link to a friend
[January 31, 2025]
By MATTHEW BROWN
The Senate confirmed Doug Burgum as interior secretary late Thursday
after President Donald Trump tapped the North Dakota billionaire to
spearhead the Republican administration's ambitions to boost fossil fuel
production.
The vote was 79-18. More than half of Senate Democrats joined all 53
Republicans in voting for Burgum.
Burgum, 68, is an ultra-wealthy software industry entrepreneur who came
from a small North Dakota farming community, where he worked at his
family’s grain elevator.
He served two terms as governor of the oil-rich state and launched a
presidential campaign in 2023, but dropped out months later and quickly
endorsed Trump.
Trump also picked Burgum to chair a new National Energy Council that's
tasked with achieving American “energy dominance.” He would have a seat
on the National Security Council — a first for the interior secretary.
His directive from Trump is to make it even easier for energy companies
to tap fossil fuel resources, including from public lands. That raised
alarms among environmentalists and some Democrats as greenhouse gas
emissions from fossil fuels bake the planet.
Burgum eagerly assisted the energy industry during his time as governor,
when he was also profiting from the lease of family land to oil
companies, according to records obtained by The Associated Press.
During his confirmation hearing, Burgum said the U.S. can use energy
development as leverage to promote peace and to lower consumer costs.
He raised concerns about the reliability of renewable power sources
promoted under former President Joe Biden, and said the U.S. needs to
generate more electricity from sources such as coal and nuclear that can
run constantly.
Democrats in response accused the Trump administration of abandoning an
“all of the above” energy policy to favor fossil fuels.
“They said wind is dead on the offshore. They are trying to do as much
of this as possible to create demand for coal, for fossil gas,” Hawaii
Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz said during a Thursday floor speech.
Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, the second-ranking Republican in the Senate,
said Burgum would rightfully prioritize energy innovation over
regulation.

[to top of second column]
|

“He’s going to take the common-sense action of unlocking our lands
for oil and for gas production,” Barrasso said. He added that more
than 600,000 acres of land in Wyoming have been approved for energy
production but were not offered for development by the Biden
administration.
The U.S. currently produces more crude oil than any nation in
history, according to the Energy Information Administration. More
cost-effective technology in recent decades drove drilling booms in
states including New Mexico, Texas and North Dakota, where vast
expanses of rural farmland have been industrialized by oil and gas
companies.
The booms brought billions of dollars in tax revenue to state and
federal governments. But burning those fuels is also unleashing
immense volumes of carbon dioxide that scientists say is warming the
planet.
The Interior Department has jurisdiction over a half-billion acres
of federal land and vast areas offshore. Those areas produce about
one-quarter of U.S. oil annually.
The interior secretary also oversees the National Park Service, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Land
Management and other subagencies.

Burgum succeeds Deb Haaland, who under Biden sharply scaled back oil
and gas sales and promoted solar and wind projects on federal lands.
Trump made energy development a centerpiece of his first term and is
again vowing to abolish restrictions on the industry that are
intended to protect the environment and public health.
Burgum, during his hearing earlier this month before the Senate
Energy and Natural Resources committee, suggested to lawmakers that
carbon dioxide from fossil fuels could be captured to neutralize
their contribution to global warming.
Carbon-capture skeptics say the technology is untested at scale and
allows the fossil-fuel industry to continue largely unchanged even
as climate change becomes increasingly urgent.
During Haaland's tenure at the Interior Department, officials also
reversed actions taken during Trump's first term that weakened
protections for imperiled species while making it easier for private
developers to pursue projects on public lands.
Republicans in Congress have said they plan to again seek changes to
rules on endangered species and they want Burgum to help.
Burgum says federal lands can be used for many purposes including
recreation, logging and oil and gas production that can lift local
economies.
“Not every acre of federal land is a national park or a wilderness
area," he told lawmakers.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |