Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources Oversight Hearing on "Impacts to Onshore Jobs, Revenue, and Energy: Review and Status of Sec. 390 Categorical Exclusions of the Energy Policy Act of 2005"
Friday, September 9, 2011 | 10:00 AM
Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources
SUBCOMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND MINERAL RESOURCES
OVERSIGHT HEARING ON:
OPENING STATEMENT: The Honorable Doug Lamborn WITNESSES AND TESTIMONY: Panel I Mike Pool Randy Bolles Kathleen M. Sgamma W. Jackson Coleman Mark Gaffigan
BACKGROUND: The oversight hearing will explore the job creation, revenue and energy production potential of categorical exclusions and the damage done by the Obama Administration’s arbitrary rule change. Categorical exclusions are a common sense way to improve the government process of approving energy production, while at the same time ensuring protection of the environment. Under the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 05), Congress directed BLM to use categorical exclusions under Section 390 to expedite energy supplies by limiting redundant analysis and unnecessary red tape. Categorical exclusions can only be used under limited circumstances and are designed to encourage the development of energy on land where the environmental impact is minor, the fields have already been developed, or where drilling was already analyzed under the National Environmental Policy Act. Soon after taking office, the Obama Administration imposed new rules to greatly slow down the use of categorical exclusions for energy production on federal lands. Eliminating categorical exclusions causes significant delays in oil and natural gas production that costs money, time and jobs. In August 2011, the Administration’s baseless new rule, which flew directly in the face of the categorical exclusions provision in EPAct 05, was overruled by a U.S. district judge. |
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