Cloud Peak Hosts EPA Administrator



Scott Pruitt, Environmental Protection Agency
administrator
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Scott Pruitt visited the Cloud Peak Energy’s headquarters in Broomfield, Colorado, last month to discuss the agency’s priorities and steps taken during the first six months of the administration and also to hear how the end of the former President Barack Obama administration’s “war on coal” has positively impacted coal jobs and the outlook for the industry.

Pruitt’s remarks focused on his efforts to return the rule of law to the EPA, to bring “a degree of humility” to governance, and to demonstrate that strong and effective environmental stewardship can be achieved without restricting economic growth or negating America’s energy advantage.

“Our country is so rich in resources and so strongly committed to clean air, clean water, and a great environment, that we don’t have to make a choice,” Pruitt said. “We can have energy-driven growth and strong environmental stewardship.”

Pruitt also emphasized his commitment to restore the EPA’s constructive engagement with all stakeholders and to reinstate the cooperative federalism with states that is imbedded in the nation’s environmental laws. “Industry and states must be partners in our efforts to ensure strong environmental stewardship and we must enforce the law rather than attempt to influence energy markets,” Pruitt said. “This agency will not be picking winners and losers.”

Cloud Peak Energy CEO Colin Marshall shared his thoughts with Pruitt on how the coal industry can help the administrator’s vision of domestic energy resources driving responsible economic growth and international influence. “We should burn abundant, low-cost coal in modern High Efficiency Low Emissions (HELE) ultra-super critical coal plants in the U.S. to supply low-cost, reliable electricity to drive domestic economic growth,” Marshall said. “The U.S. should simultaneously develop carbon capture technology for future deployment to meaningfully reduce CO2 emissions when that technology becomes commercially available. In turn, we should use domestic natural gas primarily for heating and to provide industrial/ chemical feedstock to boost economic growth while exporting surplus natural gas and oil to improve the U.S. balance of trade and drive global energy dominance.”


As featured in Womp 2017 Vol 09 - www.womp-int.com