Brouillette and climate: Is DOE changing course?

As originally published in E&E News

By: Lesley Clark

March 5, 2020

Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette is striking a different tone on climate change than his predecessor, Rick Perry, who before taking office declared it “a contrived, phony mess that is falling apart under its own weight.”

But just how different is Brouillette?

The new DOE chief and Washington insider has said he’s committed to carbon capture. He’s openly talked about climate change. He’s also reinstated a critical policy shop at DOE the Obama administration once used to foster carbon-slashing technologies.

And when the International Energy Agency released a February report finding global emissions were flat in 2019, Brouillette, who served as deputy secretary under Perry, called it “proof positive that innovation and technology are the solution to the world’s climate challenges.”

“Global emissions flattened and were offset by reductions in the United States and other nations that have successfully deployed carbon capture, renewable energy, natural gas and nuclear power,” he said in a press release.

Last week, Brouillette suggested it could be possible for the United States to reach 100% renewable energy, a goal of climate change activists (Energywire, Feb. 28).

Those moves — given amid President Trump’s aversion to acknowledging the threat of climate change or silence on the issue — are encouraging to some.

Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), who said his home state had reached an unseasonably warm 55 degrees this winter and that he worries about “cooking the planet,” told Brouillette yesterday that he had the “impression” that Brouillette is concerned about climate change.

Brouillette did not disagree, telling him, “Sure. I think it’s something that we have to address.” But, he added, “doing something about it’s a different story. I know we have an impact; the question is, what can we do? And that’s one of our roles at Department of Energy.”

Melanie Kenderdine, who ran DOE’s Office of Energy Policy and Systems Analysis under former Obama-era Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz and is now a principal at the Washington-based think tank Energy Futures Initiative, praised Brouillette’s decision to elevate a new Office of Strategic Planning and Policy that Perry had downgraded. The key policy office, which Moniz stocked with talent from the climate and energy arena, now reports directly to Brouillette rather than an undersecretary (Energywire, Jan. 29).

“I have run the DOE policy office twice and think it is tremendously effective and important that it directly reports to the secretary,” said Kenderdine. “This recent reorganization restores this reporting chain — a plus for energy policy analysis that is unbiased by reporting chains.”

Others say his comments may simply be a function of Brouillette’s tempered approach than any shift in policy, noting his loyalty to fossil fuels — a critical message under Trump. The Department of Energy did not respond to requests for comment.

Brouillette told senators at his November confirmation hearing that he’s committed to carbon capture research to remove carbon dioxide emissions as he argued that fossil fuels are likely to remain a source of the world’s energy needs for the next 40 to 50 years.

“I think we have an obligation if we care about the climate, if we care about minimizing the carbon impact of the use of these fossil fuels, we have to get these technologies off the shelf,” he said (Energywire, Nov. 15, 2019).

Like Perry, Brouillette in the past has questioned the extent to which humans play a role in warming, and he backed Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement.

“I view it as not so much a change in the administration’s perspective, but a function of [Brouillette’s] personality,” said Tom Pyle, the president of the American Energy Alliance who led the Trump DOE transition team.

‘Get slapped down’

Brouillette’s first job in the nation’s capital was in the office of former Louisiana Rep. Billy Tauzin — then a Democrat, now a Republican — and Brouillette worked on the Hill at a time when climate change wasn’t so sharply partisan, said David Hart, director of the Center for Science, Technology and Innovation Policy at George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government.

“Once upon a time in America, everybody talked about it that way,” Hart said.

Hart said he was encouraged by Brouillette’s elevation of the policy office but said there’s a risk that DOE would run in pushing policy to the White House: “You get too high a profile and out of step, you’d get slapped down,” he said.

Brouillette’s comments come amid a larger Republican effort to shift the debate on climate change, an increasing priority for younger voters. Some Republican strategists believe it’s also an opportunity to draw contrasts with Democratic proposals.

Trump, who has already signaled he wants to make the Democratic Green New Deal a campaign target, has shifted his response to climate change, from routinely dismissing it as an “expensive hoax” to last month insisting it was a “serious subject” that is “very important” to him.

Despite the language, the administration has made rolling back environmental regulations a priority. And Brouillette echoes the White House’s belief that it can cut greenhouse gas emissions with innovative technology, not by mothballing oil, gas and coal.

“You can’t expect a Cabinet secretary to get out in front of the president, his boss, but you do see a softening of Republicans and how they’re speaking about the environment and using the word ‘climate,'” said Heather Reams, executive director of the conservative clean energy organization Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions. She noted Perry by the end of his term was championing cleaner energy sources.

“Republicans have traditionally thought if you believed in climate change that means you wanted to dismantle capitalism,” Reams said. “And now Republicans are trying to figure out what are the smart policies.”

Environmentalists see the turnabout as politically expedient, with polls suggesting that more Americans, particularly younger people, are increasingly likely to prioritize environmental issues.

“You’re seeing more willingness to acknowledge the existence of the problem, but they’re not going to do anything they see as regulatory or anti-fossil fuels,” said Brett Hartl, chief political strategist at the Center for Biological Diversity Action Fund. An increasing number of Republicans “see the writing on the wall, which is that demographically, denying that climate change exists is a dead end,” he said.

Former Rep. Carlos Curbelo, a Miami Republican, said that four years ago when he called on his party to act on climate change, GOP leadership didn’t give him the time of day. Now, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) is championing legislation (Greenwire, Feb. 12).

“They’re actually trying to own an issue that they at best ignored, at worst denied,” Curbelo said, adding that he hopes Democrats don’t dismiss what he sees as a “significant evolution” by the GOP.

“Even if people think it’s not sincere, that’s actually kind of secondary,” he said. “Elected leaders across the political spectrum are feeling pressure to seriously address this issue.”

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