VERTICAL TARGET January 21, 2021 TIPRO Newsletter

VERTICAL TARGET January 21, 2021 TIPRO Newsletter

VOLUME 23, NO. 2 THE TIPRO TARGET JANUARY 21, 2021 Texas A NEW PRESIDENT AND NEW ADMINISTRATION Independent TAKE CONTROL OF THE U.S. EXECUTIVE BRANCH Producers and Royalty Owners America’s 46th president of the United States, Joe Biden, was sworn into office on Wednesday, Association January 20, 2021, becoming the nation’s new commander-in-chief and marking the beginning of a pending shift expected to transpire over priorities for the federal government that relate to the domestic development of oil and natural gas resources and production of fossil fuels. The new president has made it known that he expects to work diligently as America’s leader to combat climate change, and will place great focus on promoting clean energy projects and initiatives, a starkly different approach than that of his predecessor who largely pushed an agenda aimed at securing America’s energy dominance through an ‘America-First’ Energy Plan which heavily relied on unleashing America’s oil and natural gas potential. On his first day serving in the Oval Office, President Biden fulfilled his pledge to have America rejoin the Paris Climate Accord, an international treaty adopted by partners around the world with a common goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to mitigate effects of climate change. Reversing executive action implemented by now-former U.S. President Donald Trump, who pulled the United States from the environmental agreement during his term, President Biden signed his own executive order almost immediately upon taking office to have the nation send notification to the United Nations expressing an intent to reenter the Paris Accord within 30 days. Additionally, the president on Wednesday signed more than a dozen other executive actions aiming to dismantle policies promulgated by Donald Trump, including revised directions on the federal regulatory process applicable at the outset of the new administration. An immediate regulatory freeze has been instituted to ensure President Biden’s appointees or designees have an opportunity to review any new or pending rules that were otherwise in the works, with specific intent to assess and potentially reinstate a plethora of environmental regulations, for instance, that were weakened over the last four years under the Trump Administration. In a widely anticipated move, the new president also has revoked the presidential permit for the Keystone XL oil pipeline, an $8 billion infrastructure project under construction to transport up to 830,000 barrels of crude per day from the Alberta oil sands to U.S. refineries located along the Gulf Coast. President Biden’s decision to revoke the Keystone XL pipeline has caused many in the downstream sector to be concerned over ramifications for other pipeline projects designed to move oil and natural gas. Also on his first day, the president named public servants which will serve in acting capacities across the administration until permanent leadership can be confirmed by the U.S. Senate. This list includes Jane Nishida as acting head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Scott de la Vega who will manage the Department of Interior and David Huizenga who will be in charge of the Department of Energy. President Biden has also promoted Richard Glick, democratic commissioner of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), to become the agency’s new chairman. In alignment with President Biden’s policy agenda, Glick is expected to drive progress at FERC for clean and renewable energy and may champion other measures heavily weighing carbon emissions or environmental justice whenever the commission needs to review and approve pipelines or infrastructure projects. WHILE THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC RAGES ON, TEXAS LEGISLATORS BEGIN THE 2021 LEGISLATIVE SESSION With a heavy set of challenges and wide-range of issues to tackle, state lawmakers convened in Austin on Tuesday, January 12th for the start of Texas’ 87th Regular Legislative Session. On the opening day of session, Texas Governor Greg Abbott urged lawmakers in both the Texas House and Senate chambers to work in collaboration to tackle the issues that matter most to Texans across the state. “Over the next 140 days, we have the opportunity to not only respond to the challenges we face, but we also have an opportunity to put Texas on a trajectory to a future of even greater hope and opportunity,” said Governor Abbott. “Now more than ever, Texans need the legislature to succeed this session. But equally important, America needs Texas to lead the way. If we do this, then we will chart a course towards a healthier, safer, freer, and more prosperous future for every Texan.” Story continued on Page 3... Page 2 January 21, 2021 THE TIPRO TARGET CHAIRMAN’S MESSAGE Fellow TIPRO Members, 2021 has finally arrived, and we continue to find ourselves in interesting times. A new administration has now taken the helm of our federal government, ushering in a tidal wave of likely policy changes for the energy industry and other important business sectors for our nation. Unlike many of the pro-energy regulations we saw implemented by the Trump Administration in recent years, the new president and his party have made it clear that combating the climate crisis and pursuing environmental justice will become top priorities for the executive branch these next four years, as evidenced by the Democratic Party’s Platform that promotes goals including: • Rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement. • Eliminating carbon pollution from power plants by the year 2035. • Building and installing 500,000,000 solar panels and 60,000 wind turbines within five years. (Just an FYI on the 60,000 number, if wind energy were to be increased by 2035 to cover the same percentage of the renewable energy as it does now (74 percent) then the number needed to replace Brent Hopkins fossil fuels would be in the 400,000 range. Not including the additional electricity needed to support the proposals for an electrified transportation sector and removal of fossil fuels from the heating/cooking mix) (based on 2019 statistics from the U.S. Energy Information Administration). • Lowering families’ energy bills with energy saving upgrades to 2 million homes. • Net-zero greenhouse gas emissions from all new buildings by 2030 – 100 percent clean building sector. • 500,000 public charging stations. The list goes on and on, but this in a nutshell covers the heart of the party’s energy platform. Meanwhile, drivers of our industry can appreciate the realities of what it really takes to meet global energy demands, reminding me of the following points: • Saudi Arabia has reduced their production by one million barrels a day which has had the impact of moving oil prices above the $50 mark. Slowly the inventory overhang will be reduced, and overall market conditions should stabilize in 2021. • Record cold weather in Asia and Europe has LNG supplies in demand with prices spiking to over $28.20 per thousand BTU in Asia. Forecasters believe that LNG exports from the U.S. will remain in the 10-11 BCFGD range through the summer, which should have upward pressure on domestic natural gas prices especially if we go into next winter with less than 2.6 Tcf of storage. • A report by IEF (International Energy Forum) and BCG (Boston Consulting Group) suggest that at least a 25 percent annual increase in spending is needed to meet future energy demand. • Rystad Energy analysts also project that by 2050 the world will need an additional 139 billion barrels of commercially viable liquids to avoid an energy crisis. The question everyone should be asking is how can we bridge the gap and somehow accomplish the objectives of this new administration while recognizing the true realities of energy consumption. The bottom line is that we still have millions of people worldwide without access to electricity and clean cooking fuels, the latter of which is responsible for nearly 4 million premature deaths per year and those individuals need a clean reliable and scalable energy source. The Democratic platform recognizes that climate change can pose serious threats to the economy and financial system. It will be TIPRO’s job to see that the cure is not worse that the disease. Thank you again for your continued support especially in what may be a very active legislative session and regulatory season. As a side note: Based on 2017 EIA numbers (latest available), the natural gas electric generation sector employed 362,118 people and produced, refined and ultimately generated 1,296,000,000 MW hours of electricity or 3,578.9 MW hours per person. The solar sector em- ployed 373,807 people and generated 77,276,000 MW hours or 206.7 MW hours per person. I can see where wind energy will create a large number of jobs but I find it unrealistic to assume that if you need 17 times the manpower to generate the same amount of electricity somehow it will be cheaper. Energy density matters. Kind regards, Brent Hopkins TIPRO Calendar of Events JANUARY 27, 2021 JANUARY 28, 2021 FEBRUARY 8, 2021 VIRTUAL EVENT — Hart Energy’s VIRTUAL EVENT — CONFERENCE CALL — TIPRO Executive Oil Conference. TIPRO-Enverus Oil & Gas Outlook. State Issues Committee Meeting. For information, please For information, please For information, please email call (713) 260-6400. email [email protected]. [email protected]. Page 3 January 21, 2021 THE TIPRO TARGET DADE PHELAN CONFIRMED AS THE NEW SPEAKER OF THE TEXAS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES At the onset of the new legislative session, one of the first acts of business by members in the Texas House of Representatives was to formally affirm a new leader of the legislature’s lower chamber. The House on Tuesday, January 12th voted 143-2 to confirm state Representative Dade Phelan (R-Beaumont) for the role as 76th speaker of the Texas House.

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