Trump Was Personally Committed To Expanding US Oil, Gas Drilling, Former Interior Secretary Zinke Says

The Daily Caller

Former President Donald Trump played an active role in kickstarting U.S. oil and gas development during his tenure, according to former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke.

Trump repeatedly asked senior officials if the U.S. was “on track” to achieving energy independence and whether American drilling capacity would surpass that of Russia, Zinke told the Daily Caller News Foundation in an interview. Zinke, the first Interior secretary to serve during the Trump administration, added that the former president followed U.S. energy production numbers closely.

“When I mentioned to the president, ‘Mr. President, we don’t have to be beholden to anybody, we can not only be energy dependent, but I think we can dominate the market in energy dominance,’ he said, ‘I love it,’” Zinke recalled.

“He asked me, ‘How are we? Are we on track?’” Zinke continued. “He followed the numbers. He would ask and, of course, we’d have all those numbers ready for him.”

The former Interior secretary said that he and Trump both agreed that the U.S. could produce more oil and gas than Russia, which was the world’s top energy producer at the time, in the first two years of his administration.

In 2016, the U.S. drilled 8.9 million barrels of oil per day while Russia produced 10.6 million barrels per day, according to Energy Information Administration data. By 2019, the U.S. produced 12.2 million barrels of oil per day compared to the 10.8 million barrels per day drilled by Russia, the data showed.

The U.S. became a net exporter of total energy in 2019, factoring in oil, coal and natural gas trade, for the first time in nearly eight decades. After becoming a net exporter of crude oil in 2020, the nation is projected to return to net importer status under the Biden administration in 2022.

Among its energy policy initiatives, the Trump administration approved the Keystone XL and Dakota Access pipelines, allowed drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, nixed the Obama administration’s moratorium on coal leasing, reformed the natural gas terminal permitting process and opposed the Nord Stream 2 pipeline which it argued was a form of “Russian energy coercion.”

“I felt I had the authority from the president to bring America out of energy dependence to energy independence and all the way to energy dominance,” Zinke told the DCNF. “And I thank President Trump. He gave me a lot of latitude to get it done.”

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