From Hurricane Maria to COVID, Gas Lobbyist-turned-Trump Energy Lawyer Uses Crises as 'Opportunity'

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Among a string of recent environmental rollbacks, President Donald Trumpโ€™s U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)ย aims to vastly narrow the scope of environmental reviews for those applying for liquefied natural gas (LNG) export permits. The proposal has been guided by Bill Cooper, a former oil and gasย industry lobbyist who’s now a top lawyer for the DOE.

On May 1, the DOE issued a proposal to limit environmental reviews for LNG export permit proposals so that the review applies to only the export process itself โ€” literally โ€œoccurring at or after the point of export.โ€ The rule would take off the table for consideration lifecycle greenhouse gas analyses, broader looks at both build-outs of pipelines and power plants attached to the export proposals, and other potential environmental impacts.

It comes as many larger forces up theย pressure on LNG projects: The oil and gas industry is facingย financial crisis,ย exports of fracked gasย to the global market are steeply waning, and the COVID-19 pandemic and accompanying economic nosedive are marching on in the Unitedย States.

The DOE‘s Bill Cooper, an oil and gas attorney by background with a long history of navigating the industry through crises both inside and outside of the federal government, signed off on the regulatoryย proposal.

Now DOE General Counsel, Cooper has proven instrumental in creating todayโ€™s U.S. regulatory regime both for fracking for natural gas and exporting it. Thisย attempted rule change is just the latest chapter in that story. For Cooper, crisis has consistently served as an opportunity to implement regulatory change to favor the oil and gasย industry.

As DeSmog hasย reported, Cooper played a critical role in getting regulatory exemption languageย now known as the โ€œHalliburton Loopholeโ€ inserted into the 2005 energy bill.ย 

That loophole, in essence, ushered in the modern fracking boom by giving theย industry exemptions from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) enforcement of the Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Water Act when companies use the horizontal drilling technique key to unlocking shale oil and gas. In 1999, theย industry had openly admitted it could likely not perform the drilling technique without suchย regulatory relaxation. However, Cooper, workingย as legal counsel for the House Energy and Commerce Committee,ย came through with a legislative fix in theย 2005ย energyย bill.

Cooperโ€™s boss at the time was the congressionalย committeeโ€™s staff director, Dan Brouillette. In a bit of dรฉjร  vu, Cooper is once again working for Brouillette, an auto industry lobbyist-turned-U.S. Secretary ofย Energy.

‘Disaster forย Communities’

This latestย rule change proposal represents another major rollback of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), part of aย broader ongoing attack by the Trump administration on the bedrock environmental law that continued even after this May proposal. NEPA mandates a robust environmental evaluationย of major interstate projects and those sitedย on federal lands or waters, while also forcing federal agencies to considerย impacts on communities and the environment and hear feedback from theย public that can shape the project and federalย decision-making.

On June 4, President Trump signed a related executive order, invoking the state of national emergency declared due to COVID-19 and mandating that โ€œagencies should take all reasonable measures to speed infrastructure investments.โ€ It seeks to waive environmental review and public comment requirementsย under laws like NEPA and the Endangered Species Act for projects ranging from highways and mines to pipelines and LNG exportย terminals.

The administration argues that โ€œemergency circumstances make it necessary to take actions with significant environmental impacts without observing the regulationsโ€ found in these bedrock laws meant to protect public health, air, water, plants, andย wildlife.

Cooper has previously supported defanging NEPA reviews by removing requirements toย analyzeย theย lifecycle climate impacts of proposedย projects.

โ€œDOE proposes to revise its regulations consistent with the legal principle that potential environmental effects considered under NEPA do not include effects that the agency has no authority to prevent, because they would not have a sufficiently close causal connection to the proposed action,โ€ reads the outline of the proposed rule change published in the Federal Register. โ€œHere, DOEโ€™s proposed action is authorization of natural gasย exports.โ€

In the outline of the proposed rule change, the agency pointed to two of itsย reports examining the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions for exporting LNG, one in 2014 and its most recent iteration in 2019. DOE said that those reports’ conclusions make all further analysis of potential greenhouse gas emissions from LNG export terminals a mootย point.

โ€œBoth Reports concluded that the use of U.S. LNG exports for power production in European and Asian markets will not increase global [greenhouse gas] emissions from a life cycle perspective, when compared to regional coal extraction and consumption for power production,โ€ the DOE wrote thisย year.

Bill Cooper, third from left, next to Rick Perry
Bill Cooper, third from left, next to Energy Secretary Rick Perry on May 9, 2019. Credit: Department ofย Energy

But on a lifecycle perspective, scientists and analysts have foundย that fracking for gas and shipping it to global markets as LNG can come out asย bad asย or worse for the climate than coal. Collin Rees, Senior Campaigner at Oil Change U.S., called LNG exports a โ€œdisaster for communities andย climate.โ€

โ€œProposed LNG export terminals are being fought coast-to-coast by frontline communities because they would wreck the local environment, boost the devastating fracking boom, and lock the world into fossil fuel dependency for decades to come,โ€ he told DeSmog. โ€œThe fossil fuel industry’s arguments over the precise climate impacts of gas intentionally avoids a much more important point โ€” we can’t afford any more fossil fuel infrastructure, fullย stop,โ€

A number of those frontlineย communities areย Native American, with a slew of tribes, including theย Klamath and the Yurok tribes,ย coming out against the Jordan Cove LNG export terminal in Oregon. Rees also pointed to the โ€œperfect storm of toxic racism, xenophobia, and environmental injusticeโ€ thatย a proposed LNG facility proposal presents toย communities along the U.S.-Mexico border in Brownsville,ย Texas.

โ€œThe Brownsville community is already battling detention centers and an ongoing legacy of colonization, and they’re now fighting three LNG export projects that could devastate the shrimping industry that’s been one of the region’s main economic drivers for decades,โ€ said Rees. โ€œNEPA is a critical tool for these communities to fight back against environmental injustices like these proposedย facilities.โ€

This latestย DOE regulatory proposal from Bill Cooper also points to a Technical Support Document in making its case for the environmentalย merits of LNG. In doing so, it cites a 2019 white paper published by the International Group of Liquefied Natural Gas Importers, whose members include LNG industry titans such as Shell, Cheniere Energy, Dominion, and Sempraย Energy.

Cooper and the DOE press team did not respond to repeated requests for comment for thisย article.

Cooper’s Lobbying forย LNG

For nearly a decade following his time in Congress, Cooper worked as a lobbyist for the LNG industry as executive director for the Center for LNG. The group,ย whose members include BP, Chevron, Energy Transfer Equity, ExxonMobil, Sempra Energy, Shell, and others,ย was created as an offshoot of the oil and gas industry’s most powerful lobbying group, the American Petroleum Institute (API). Cooper also was previously a lobbyist for API.


Bill Cooper.ย Credit: U.S. Department ofย Energy

He has played the long game in pushing to expedite the federal LNG export permitting process, lobbying to make it happenย at least since 2012, according to disclosures and other materials reviewed byย DeSmog.

During an October 2012 hearing on the then-proposed Cove Point LNG export terminal in Maryland, Cooper testified to the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) about the permitting process. Then wearing his Center for LNG hat, Cooper argued for FERC to offer the industry a truncated environmental review process, offering a similar regulatory framework to the one he recently signed off on as DOE Generalย Counsel.

โ€œWhen preparing the [environmental assessment], the analysis should focus on the area immediately surrounding the facility,โ€ said Cooper at theย hearing.

In 2012, the Obama administration grantedย an export permit to the first LNG export terminal of the modern era,ย Sabine Pass LNG,ย owned by the company Cheniere. But the push to expedite permitting for LNG exports got a major shot in the arm in early 2014, after Russiaโ€™s annexation of the Crimea inย Ukraine.

Sabine Pass LNG import terminal under construction in 2009
Cheniere Energy Sabine Pass LNG tanks in 2009, when the terminal was only approved to import natural gas.
Credit:ย Roy Luck,ย CC BYย 2.0

At that time, the gas industry began a full court press lobbying campaign, arguing that U.S. LNG could wean European Union countries off of Russian gas. Cooper played a key role in that, telling the industry trade publication Natural Gas Intelligence, and writing in an op-ed himself, that the moment of crisis can serve as an opportunity for the LNGย industry.

โ€œFrom the tsunami in March 2011 that took thousands of lives and critically damaged Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, to the political upheaval in Ukraine, to the earthquake in Chile, crises are unpredictable and sometimes warrant a geopolitical response,โ€ Cooper wrote in the Houston Chronicle in aย piece titled, โ€œCrises offer opportunity for U.S. energy markets.โ€ โ€œOur response should be to expeditiously address government permits so there will be fewer roadblocks for the U.S. to meet theseย needs.โ€

The Center for LNG then took the opportunity, under Cooperโ€™s helm, to field 11 lobbyists to push Congress for legislation that expedites LNG export permits. One subsequent billย was the Domestic Prosperity and Global Freedom Act, calling for the DOE to make a final decision on an LNG export application within 30 days of completing environmental impactย statements.

Two weeks after that legislation was introduced, Cooper told Natural Gas Intelligence, โ€œWe didn’t gin up the idea that it ought to be connected in some way to LNG exports,โ€ speaking of the rhetoric around tying the Ukraine crisis to support for LNG exports.

โ€œBut Congress did, obviously, and a lot of editorials, experts and geopolitical analysts have all jumped on that,โ€ Cooper added. โ€œWe appreciate the attention that LNG exports are receiving, and if it does provide a catalyst to make something happen that heretofore has not, then we’re going to be very happy withย that.โ€

That bill did pass in one chamber of Congress, the House, andย Cooperโ€™s lobbying groupย praisedย it upon passage. Industry players lobbying for it beyond the Center for LNG included API, America’s Natural Gas Alliance (ANGA, now part of API), Koch Industries, Halliburton, BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, and dozens of others.

Congress introduced two laterย bills with many of the same lobbying forces behind them in the weeks and years ahead, both of whichย the Center forย LNG alsoย lobbied.

Once the Ukraine saga had ended, theย Domestic Prosperity and Global Freedom Act became the LNG Permitting Certainty and Transparency Act. Cooper praised the House’s passage of the bill in 2015, though it would stall in theย Senate.

โ€œCLNG applauds the House of Representativesโ€™ bipartisan solution to bring regulatory certainty to the permitting process for LNG export applications by implementing a deadline for DOE to act,โ€ he said in Center for LNG press release at theย time.

The billโ€™s passage would be one of his last efforts as a lobbyist for the group, though, terminating his lobbying registration in March of 2015. Cooper left lobbying to return to work for Congress, this time as a senior policy advisor and staff director of the House Subcommittee on Energy and Mineralย Resources.

While his efforts to speed up LNG export permitting didn’t pan out, the years of his LNG lobbying appearย to have paid off. The Obama administration handedย an LNG exportย permit to the same Cove Point LNG terminal for which Cooper had offered testimony at the 2012 hearing. Cove Point got the Obama green light two months after Cooper returned to work on Capitol Hill. The Obama administration also approved export permits forย three other companies โ€” Cameron LNG, Golden Pass LNG, and Elba Island LNG โ€” during Obama’s last year inย office.

Puerto Rico PROMESA

After leaving Congress again in 2017, Cooper went back through the revolving door to work for the gas industry in the midst of another major crisis:ย This one in Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, a deadly storm intensified by climateย change.

Power line repair after Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico
Prime Power transmission and distribution specialistsย repair power lines in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico, Octoberย 19, 2017. The mission supports those affected by Hurricane Maria. Credit: Department of Defense/Air Force Master Sgt. Joshua L. DeMotts, publicย domain

Cooperโ€™s storyย in Puerto Rico starts with his efforts toย draft PROMESA,ย the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act. Thisย legislation created the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico to watchdog and manage its economic recovery from its debt crisis. That crisis predated โ€”ย  but was worsened by โ€” Hurricane Maria. Cooperโ€™s boss at the time, U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop (R-UT), was a co-sponsor of PROMESA and nearly nominated Cooper to serve as executive director for the oversightย board.

The American Prospectโ€™s David Dayen reported in 2016 that โ€œCooper wrote the section of PROMESA that would expedite conversions to natural gasโ€ in Puerto Rico. This portion of the bill has a familiar ring to it: callingย for an expedited permitting process for any electricity sector proposals deemedย โ€œcritical.โ€ According to a resumeย obtained via public records request, Cooper described himself as the โ€œlead drafter and negotiatorโ€ of PROMESA.

From 2017-2018, Cooper opened up a Washington, D.C. office for the Puerto Rico-based corporate law firm โ€‹McConnell Valdรฉs. Just several months after Hurriane Maria tore through the island, Cooper signed upย to lobby for gas utilityย giant, Engie North America. Engie co-owns the EcoElรฉctrica LNG import terminal in Puerto Rico and its neighboring EcoElรฉctrica Power Plant, the first natural gas power plant constructed in Puertoย Rico.

According to his financial disclosure forms filed in early 2018 also obtained by DeSmog, Cooper earned over $345,000 alone for his 2017 legal and lobbying work in Puerto Rico. The lobbying paid dividends. Due to Cooperโ€™s efforts, gas now flows to Puerto Rico at ever-increasing levels in the aftermath of Hurricaneย Maria.

Cooper eventually left that job in 2018, as he awaited Senate confirmation for the role that would set him up to revisit expediting LNG export permitting.ย His old boss, now Energy Secretary, Dan Brouillette gave him a job as a senior advisor for theย agency.

Under the terms of a recusal letter Cooper sent to the DOE in January 2019, he pledged,ย with regardย to McConnellย Valdรฉs, that he โ€œwill not participate personally and substantially in any particular matter involving specific parties in which I know this firm is a party or represents a partyโ€ for a period of oneย year.

‘One of the Absolute Worst People’ to Regulate Environmentalย Reviews

The public commenting period for the DOE‘s proposed LNG exports rule closed on June 1. Two of Cooper’s former employers, the Center for LNG and American Petroleum Institute, submitted comments on the ruleย change.

โ€œReliable trade in natural gas is critical to maintaining the U.S. natural gas and LNG industry as an engine for growth in the United States,โ€ the Center for LNG wrote. โ€œHaving reliable regulations here in the United States is an important step in enabling U.S. LNG exports toย flourish.โ€

Pat Parenteau, a professor at Vermont Law School with legal expertise on NEPA, told DeSmog that he does not think the proposed rule will carry legal muster in court. NEPA requires the federal government to take a โ€œhard lookโ€ at the wide range of environmental impacts a proposed project mayย have.

โ€œI would expect a legal challenge to this DOE interpretation of its NEPA responsibilities,โ€ said Parenteau. โ€œIt will join a long list of similar challenges to Trump rollbacks that are pending in the federal courts all across the country. Quite a mess for the next administration to cleanย up.โ€

Oil Change Internationalโ€™s Rees criticized Cooperโ€™s role in the proposal to weakenย NEPA. โ€œCalling this the fox guarding the henhouse doesn’t do it justice,โ€ heย said.

โ€œThis rule change would be a massive giveaway to polluters, so it’s no surprise to see it being pushed by a fossil fuel lobbyist who’s now part of the Trump administration,โ€ said Rees. โ€œBill Cooper is one of the absolute worst people in the world to be regulating environmental reviews for fossil fuelย projects.โ€

Main image: Bill Cooper sworn in as U.S. Department of Energy General Counsel on May 9, 2019.ย Credit: U.S. Department of Energy onย YouTubeย 

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Steve Horn is the owner of the consultancy Horn Communications & Research Services, which provides public relations, content writing, and investigative research work products to a wide range of nonprofit and for-profit clients across the world. He is an investigative reporter on the climate beat for over a decade and former Research Fellow for DeSmog.

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