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Democrats protest extra US scrutiny on solar and wind projects on public land

Four Democratic U.S. Senators, on Friday, criticized the directive issued by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum last month requiring his office review all decisions made on wind and solar projects on federal land. They said it would lead to delays and discourage investment at a time when power demand is increasing.

The lawmakers claimed that the directive would create a bottleneck, and thereby halt progress in wind and solar power, which made up the majority of the new U.S. electricity added to the grid during the past year.

The letter from Senators Martin Heinrich and Ron Wyden to Burgum stated that "rather than ensuring a process of efficient approval for all energy sources, this directive appears to actively disfavor renewable projects, in favor more expensive and more polluting technologies", such as fossil fuels.

They called on Burgum to withdraw the directive and reinstate a transparent, timely and efficient framework for renewable energy.

The Interior Department made no comment on the letter. A spokesperson stated that "the enhanced oversight will ensure that all evaluations are thorough, deliberative and comprehensive."

Donald Trump has called solar and wind unreliable, expensive and has promoted policies to increase U.S. oil, gas, and coal production.

Heinrich is the ranking Democrat in the Senate Energy Committee. He represents New Mexico which has abundant oil, gas and wind resources.

Interior said that the review would include rights-of-way and leases as well as construction, permits, and other activities.

Trump has taken several steps to limit wind and solar. His spending bill accelerated the phase out of tax credits for renewable energy sources by several years.

Solar and wind companies said Interior's directive contradicted Trump's larger goal to reduce burdensome regulations, boost energy for data centers and artificial Intelligence which is increasing U.S. demand for power for the first time since two decades.

The senators stated that the Interior Department of former President Joe Biden had reviewed more than 65 onshore clean energy utility projects. Nearly 200 others were in line, they added. (Reporting and editing by David Gregorio; Timothy Gardner)

(source: Reuters)