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US Interior Department begins to implement Trump's energy agenda

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The agency released a statement stating that former North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum signed six orders during his first day of office as Interior Secretary.

These orders are a result of a series of executive orders Trump released in his first few days as president. These actions instructed agencies to accelerate the permitting of energy projects, and undo environmental protections his administration considers burdensome.

Burgum's actions signal a radical shift in Interior Department policy. The former president Joe Biden’s administration tried for four years, as part of its strategy to combat global warming, to slow down new fossil fuel developments on public lands.

Burgum, in a press release, said that today marks the start of an exciting new chapter for the Department of the Interior. We are committed to working together to unlock America's potential in energy dominance, economic development and making life more affordable for all American families.

Burgum's order directed staff at the agency to identify emergency and legal authorities in order to speed up project development and permits in accordance with Trump's declaration of energy emergency and to eliminate burdensome regulation in part by reviewing funding under laws from Biden's Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

In a statement, the agency said it would eliminate 10 new regulations for each one that is introduced.

One order revoked Biden’s withdrawal of large portions of federal waters for new offshore oil and natural gas development while another seeks a boost in resource development on federal lands and state lands of Alaska.

Interior Department leases parcels of land and waters from the Arctic to Gulf of Mexico for drilling operations, which produce about a quarter of U.S. gas and oil output. (Reporting and editing by Leslie Adler, Jamie Freed and Nichola Groom)

(source: Reuters)