The Trump administration has an opportunity to free the U.S. from draconian climate regulations and directives the European Union (EU) has imposed on American oil and gas companies for years, energy sector experts and industry insiders told the Daily Caller News Foundation. [emphasis, links added]
Although the Trump administration made a major trade deal with the EU in July that benefitted American energy, the EU still imposes a number of climate regulations and directives that drive up U.S. energy costs, according to some energy policy experts.
The Trump administration is positioned to pressure the EU into a fairer trading atmosphere and ease burdens on the American energy sector, industry insiders told the DCNF.
“It’s going to take the pressure of the Trump administration in the trade negotiations to get the EU to back down from these extraterritorial regulations imposed on American companies, including U.S. oil and natural gas producers,” Vice President of Corporate Policy Aaron Padilla of the American Petroleum Institute (API) told the DCNF.
“The EU should not make it more difficult for companies to provide the energy that their consumers need.”
Energy sector experts and insiders specifically pointed to the Critical Entities Resilience Directive (CER), the EU methane regulation, and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) [as key areas of focus].
The CSDDD requires companies to have a net-zero transition plan, and the EU methane regulation places additional stringent emissions standards on the oil and gas industry, while the CER requires companies to report a whole host of risks that add red tape, according to energy insiders.
Trump has threatened the EU with tariffs to buy American oil and gas, and part of the major July trade deal required the EU to purchase $750 billion in American energy by 2028.
“The Administration continues to address trade barriers against every American industry with our trading partners, and commitments from the EU, Japan, South Korea, and other countries to buy hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of American energy over the next few years reflect how President Trump is delivering on his agenda of fair trade and drill, baby, drill,” White House spokesman Kush Desai told the DCNF.
Tammy Nemeth, a strategic energy analyst, told the DCNF that the climate regulations and directives are burdensome to American oil and gas companies.
Nemeth argues that these regulations increase costs on U.S. businesses and Americans, as companies hoping to do business in the EU have to wrestle with layers of red tape and adopt a net-zero transition plan.
It is difficult to estimate, but compliance with EU climate regulations and directives can add significant costs, according to Nemeth.
“I think if companies are approaching [these non-tariff barriers] with open eyes, they’ll say we need the government to help us maybe eliminate some of these non-tariff barriers, because if the compliance costs [equate to a] 10 to 30% increase, then that’s something that they have to pass on, not just to those to whom they’re exporting, but also domestically, because those are costs that are borne by the entire company,” Nemeth told the DCNF.
“[These non-tariff barriers] could therefore increase costs to Americans, not just passing it on only to the Europeans, because all of those bureaucratic structures have to be established within the company, and that’s costs they have to absorb or pass on in some way.”
If American oil and gas companies decide not to comply with the climate regulations, they can be heavily fined or essentially forced out of trading with the EU, Nemeth said.
“It’s really quite absurd,” Nemeth said, noting that the EU already requires a significant amount of red tape and environmental reporting paperwork. Nemeth added that all the reporting can also open companies up to environmental litigation.
API has generally supported President Donald Trump’s energy policy and praised his April decision to exempt oil and gas from new reciprocal tariffs; however, the trade association argues that now is the time to force the EU into relaxing its non-tariff barriers.
API has asked the Trump administration to negotiate EU non-tariff barriers, including the CSDDD and EU methane regulations, to ease burdens on American oil and gas companies hoping to do business in the EU, Padilla noted.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected the International Maritime Organization’s net-zero framework on Tuesday, stating that the U.S. “will not tolerate any action that increases costs for our citizens, energy providers, shipping companies and their customers, or tourists.”
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