President Joe Biden has long railed against fossil fuels as a major driver of the climate crisis. But out on the stump, top members of his administration are citing oil and natural gas exports as a triumph for the U.S. as the war in Ukraine rages and Europe turns to the United States and other friendly nations for energy supplies. This contradiction in policy objectives at the heart of Biden's climate and energy agenda was on full display this week, including when energy executives gathered in Houston for the CERAWeek by S&P Global conference and when the president released his $6.8 trillion budget map. Biden’s spending plan would prioritize low-carbon energy and climate spending while axing tax breaks and subsidies used by the fossil fuel industry. To cut the deficit, the White House has proposed tax increases on billionaires, wealthy investors and corporations. At the same time, speaking in Houston, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm praised the dramatic uptick in U.S. oil and gas exports in response to Russia's war in Ukraine. The United States has been “an indispensable energy partner to our allies and a global energy powerhouse,” she told energy executives Wednesday. And Biden is working with U.S. natural gas producers to create an international standard for verifying the climate impact of “clean” natural gas, writes POLITICO reporter Ben Lefebvre. The move could boost domestic production by allowing U.S. natural gas companies to sell fuel to countries working to combat climate change. The oil and gas industry reaped record profits last year, and production is only expected to grow. Oil produced in the United States is projected to hit 12.4 million barrels a day this year and 12.6 million barrels a day by 2024, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Both would be records for domestic oil production. Gas production, meanwhile, is on track to eclipse 100 billion cubic feet a day this year — a first in U.S. history. The science is clear. The world needs to swiftly and aggressively cut planet-warming pollution to stave off the worst of climate change. And while Biden’s budget proposal talks a big game, it has little chance of moving through Congress while Republicans control the House. Still, the president’s attack on fossil fuel subsidies within the budget proposal could help him retain favor among young climate activists who drove Democratic victories in 2020 and 2022, write POLITICO’s E&E News reporters Scott Waldman and Adam Aton.
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