Government shutdown harming U.S. energy and jobs due to frozen EPA permitting

Government shutdown harming U.S. energy and jobs due to frozen EPA permitting

Spread the love

Energy advocates are warning of the harm the government shutdown is causing to American energy and jobs due to the fact that EPA permitting remains frozen, while the federal government’s decades of “approval-heavy policies” is likewise to blame.

Campaign director for Power America at the nonprofit research institute America First Policy Institute Ted Ellis told The Center Square that “the shutdown has disrupted essential, nonpolitical EPA work that communities rely on.”

Such services include “reviewing state air and water plans, processing permits tied to refinery upgrades, pipelines, or drinking water and wastewater projects,” Ellis said.

“When that work pauses, construction crews can’t start, state regulators can’t issue their own approvals, and private investment sits idly by,” Ellis said.

“Every week of delay adds cost and, in some cases, misses weather or construction windows, which is especially hard on smaller communities and on energy projects that are already dealing with high interest rates,” Ellis said.

In an America First Policy Institute press release, Ellis said that the stalling of American energy and jobs is due to the shutdown freezing EPA permitting.

Similar to Ellis, communications director Larry Behrens at Power the Future told The Center Square: “There is no doubt this shutdown is having an impact on energy because when there is less manpower to review permits and [roll] back needless regulations, energy projects can suffer.”

Power the Future is a nonprofit dedicated to Americans working in reliable energy sources, according to its website.

Behrens told The Center Square that “the American people elected leaders to deliver Energy Dominance and with every potential delay there is time lost.”

“Even a short stoppage could have a long impact as projects potentially lose momentum and face higher costs with delays,” Behrens said.

Behrens made the point that “the American people should be angry to see [that] many of the same politicians who now vote to keep the government closed sat silently in the last days of the Biden administration while the EPA tried to burn through as much money as possible.”

“Their message is clear, when they were in charge, they couldn’t spend tax dollars fast enough, but when Americans demand energy dominance to lower prices, they’re fine serving as a road block,” Behrens said.

Ellis told The Center Square that the government shutdown will have lasting impacts on U.S. energy.

“Shutdowns create a backlog,” Ellis said. “When EPA comes back to full capacity, it will have to restart suspended work.”

“That pushes timelines for energy and other projects further into the future even if Congress solves the funding fight in the near term,” Ellis said.

“Because the shutdown plan prevents EPA from acting on many state submissions, states are also unable to fully implement their own programs,” Ellis said. “These delays ripple outward, holding up energy projects and job activity across the country.”

Ellis emphasized that the problem is “not that emergency environmental protection stops.”

“The point is that the decades of approval-heavy policies from the federal government have made it too hard, even in normal times, to build the energy and industrial capacity the country needs,” Ellis said.

“A shutdown magnifies that weakness when those approvals can’t even be evaluated,” Ellis said.

“The government must reopen and begin issuing permits again so Americans can continue building affordable, reliable energy,” Ellis said.

Shortly before the shutdown, the EPA issued a permit for a deepwater port in Texas that will allow for 365 million oil barrels to be loaded each year, as The Center Square reported.

Neither clean energy group American Council on Renewable Energy nor the EPA responded when asked to comment.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump orders Department of War to begin testing nuclear weapons

Trump orders Department of War to begin testing nuclear weapons

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump on Wednesday ordered the U.S. Department of War to immediately start testing U.S. nuclear weapons just ahead of a meeting with President...
WATCH: Tax proposals draw questions from Pritzker and GOP state rep

WATCH: Tax proposals draw questions from Pritzker and GOP state rep

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers are considering progressive revenue measures in the final hours of the fall veto session, but...
Illinois quick hits: Former sheriff's deputy guilty in Massey murder; appeals court intervenes in Bavino case

Illinois quick hits: Former sheriff’s deputy guilty in Massey murder; appeals court intervenes in Bavino case

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Former sheriff's deputy guilty in Massey murder A jury has found a former Sangamon County sheriff’s deputy guilty of second-degree murder...

WATCH: Warnings of higher IL property taxes heard as pension bill advances

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Supporters of an Illinois Statehouse pension measure say it is a “fix” for Tier 2 public employee...
Top-selling automaker confirms U.S. investment, but no details yet

Top-selling automaker confirms U.S. investment, but no details yet

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The world's top-selling automaker said it plans to continue investing in U.S. operations but wouldn't confirm on Wednesday that it will be $10 billion, as...
Fentanyl poised to take center stage during Trump, Xi meeting

Fentanyl poised to take center stage during Trump, Xi meeting

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Fentanyl is set to be at the center of President Donald Trump’s scheduled meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping Thursday morning. Trump told reporters last...
'Outrageous': Lawmakers bash Biden admin for targeting, surveilling 156 Republicans

‘Outrageous’: Lawmakers bash Biden admin for targeting, surveilling 156 Republicans

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The Biden administration’s probe into President Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss progressed far beyond investigating potential fraud and potentially targeted 156 conservatives and conservative organizations....

WATCH: Cruz calls on House to impeach federal judge over subpoenas of Republicans

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, on Wednesday called on the U.S. House of Representatives to impeach a federal judge involved in an investigation into President...

WATCH: Pritzker declares agricultural trade ‘crisis’ while Trump touts new deals

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed an executive order to declare an agricultural trade crisis in Illinois. The...
Economists say Trump's tariff play could boost trade deficits

Economists say Trump’s tariff play could boost trade deficits

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Economists told the U.S. Supreme Court that President Donald Trump's plan to reduce U.S. trade deficits will backfire, exacerbating the underlying issue the president used...
Amnesty International condemns U.S. strikes on suspected drug boats

Amnesty International condemns U.S. strikes on suspected drug boats

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Amnesty International, a human rights organization, condemned U.S. military strikes on suspected drug boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific that have killed 57 people...
Federal Reserve cuts key interest rate for second time this year

Federal Reserve cuts key interest rate for second time this year

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The Federal Reserve cut interest rates by a quarter-point on Wednesday for the second time this year, not nearly as much as President Donald Trump...
Immigrants grow Michigan's population, advocates say

Immigrants grow Michigan’s population, advocates say

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Detroit’s population grew for the second year in a row after years of steady decline, according to census data. Advocacy groups attribute much of the...
WATCH: Trump says he can't run for third term after months of conjecture

WATCH: Trump says he can’t run for third term after months of conjecture

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that he's disappointed he can't seek another term as president after months of speculation that he might try to...
Senate votes to approve 'Bat Week'; no vote to end shutdown

Senate votes to approve ‘Bat Week’; no vote to end shutdown

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square U.S. senators have remained locked in a government shutdown fight for nearly a month, but unanimously agreed Wednesday to designate Oct. 24 to Oct. 31,...