VA’s New Republican Gov Pledges to Cancel RGGI Carbon Tax
Virginia’s new incoming governor, Glenn Youngkin, said yesterday that he will use his executive power to withdraw Virginia from a program called the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI)–nothing more than a high tax on carbon dioxide. Youngkin called RGGI a tax on electricity ratepayers and a bad deal for ratepayers and for business. Youngkin, unlike Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf, gets it. He understands. And he’s willing to put ratepayers and businesses first.
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Project Canary, a program that certifies natural gas drillers and pipeline companies as producing responsibly sourced gas (RSG), continues to make big inroads in the Marcellus/Utica. Earlier this week MDN told you that Olympus Energy will use Project Canary to certify both its drilling and (believed to be a first in the country) its gathering pipeline system (see 
The DUG East (Developing Unconventional Gas) was held this week in Pittsburgh, PA. A number of big names–CEOs of major Marcellus/Utica companies–gave talks to those who attended. Two of the biggest names on the platform were Toby Rice, CEO of EQT Corporation (the largest natural gas producer in the United States), and Nick DeIuliis, CEO of CNX Resources, the separated arm of what used to be CONSOL Energy, a coal company. Both men are evangelists for natural gas, but both have a distinctly different style and way of going about their advocacy. It’s like apples and oranges.
Even though U.S. LNG exports help the U.S. by providing more jobs and economic prosperity, and even though U.S. LNG exports help the world by providing a green alternative to coal and other forms of environmentally destructive fuels, some Democrats continue to bash away at natural gas and are actively trying to kill the industry in our country. Legislation introduced Dec. 7 by Representative Jan Schakowsky (Democrat-Illinois), and Nanette Diaz Barragán (Democrat-California), would bar the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) from approving new LNG terminals.
Underinvestment in oil and gas development extended into a second year in 2021 even as global energy demand rebounded, raising the prospect of price shocks, scarcity, and growing energy poverty, according to a new report by the International Energy Forum (IEF) and IHS Markit. Oil and gas investment will need to return to pre-COVID levels and stay there through 2030 to restore market balance, the report states. If more investment doesn’t happen quickly, the world will experience more price gyrations and it will lead to “adverse economic consequences,” such as wider energy poverty, more frequent scarcity, and fuel switching to more polluting energy sources such as wood and coal.
MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: CNX chief calls wind and solar “make believe energy”; NATIONAL: Kinder Morgan woos investors with financial discipline, ESG commitments; Washington policymakers need energy realism and energy humanism; Stupid inflation tricks, round 2.