Top GOP leaders visit Houston's refineries to combat Pres. Joe Biden's energy agenda

Nick Natario Image
Wednesday, February 3, 2021
Top GOP visit Houston refineries to combat Biden's energy plan
"These are job-killing ideas put into work that we have to stop." Press play to learn what the GOP plan to do to counter Biden after he put a stop to the Keystone Pipeline.

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- A group of top Republican congressional leaders worried about the future of oil and gas visited refineries in Houston to send a message to the new administration.

Ten congress members, including House Minority Leader, Kevin McCarthy, toured a facility at the Houston Ship Channel and held a roundtable discussion on Tuesday with workers and company leaders. This happened two weeks after Pres. Joe Biden signed an executive order ending the Keystone Pipeline.

READ MORE: President Joe Biden draws criticism in Texas for blocking Keystone XL permit

Republicans wanted to see the impact. They heard from one Houston-based company about how the order forced layoffs.

"It's very difficult to look someone in the face, and knowing they have small kids, grown kids, they're in college, and they have a mortgage and car payments and tell them, 'I'm sorry, we don't have a job for you,'" said Mike Thibodeaux, international senior vice president of Price Gregory.

Biden said canceling the Keystone Pipeline and ending drilling on public land will help slow down climate change. By ending those programs, he's eyeing the future. Biden said he also wants to create $10 million green energy jobs.

RELATED: ABC13 hosts virtual job fair featuring hundreds of green jobs amid Biden administration's focus on climate change

Republican leaders said we're far from there, and halting energy progress will have an immediate impact.

"For the last year now, they've had to deal with COVID-19 and this pandemic," U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls said. "We're seeing the American family struggle each and every day, and now they get sucker punched again."

The Texas Oil and Gas Association estimates the Biden orders will cost 120,000 Texans their jobs by next year.

Energy experts told ABC13 that's not all true.

"I think 100,000 jobs is probably an over-estimation of what the impacts are going to be," said Ramanan Krishnamoorti, the University of Houston's Chief Energy Officer.

Krishnamoorti said it's not Biden's orders hurting the industry. The pandemic, and investors leaving oil and gas, are having a devastating impact.

The latest Texas jobs report shows 14,000 mining and logging jobs, which includes oil and gas, were lost in the Houston area last year, making it the fastest declining industry.

SEE ALSO: Joe Biden to pause oil and gas sales on public lands: AP sources

Developing a new energy source, Krishnamoorti said, will be key to helping Houston remain the energy capital of the world. He also said Biden's plan to invest $2 trillion is a good start.

"I would be worried, but the second phase of this, there are some incredible opportunities," he explained.

Republicans said energy workers can't wait for the new jobs to be developed, and they're worried about more people losing their jobs.

While in Houston, McCarthy outlined how the GOP plans to counter the president's orders.

They're introducing legislation to try and preserve Keystone Pipeline jobs. They also want to dredge the Houston Ship Channel to help Texas refineries create more product.

"If President Biden is serious about any unity, come to Houston," McCarthy said. "Come to middle America. Come look in the faces of those workers who earn $80,000 a year, and tell them why you took their jobs away."

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