Under Trump, ‘Drill, Baby, Drill’ Heralds America’s Return as a Global Energy Superpower

More American drilling means less profits for Iran, Russia, and other enemies of freedom.

Montinique Monroe/Getty Images
President Trump at the site of an active oil rig on July 29, 2020 at Midland, Texas. Montinique Monroe/Getty Images

Well, so much for the vaunted renewable energy “transition” to save the planet. This was always a fable. We get 80 percent of our energy from fossil fuels, and with President Trump now in the White House, that ratio is rising, not falling.

A Reuters headline from recent days tells the real story: “US crude production to hit record 13.41 million (barrels per day) in 2025 before falling.”

The data from the International Energy Agency tell the same story about clean natural gas: We’re producing more of it than ever before. Why shouldn’t we? 

The United States has greater access to clean, cheap, reliable and made-in-America natural gas than any other nation. Natural gas is far cheaper and less land-intensive than ugly wind and solar farms that industrialize America’s natural landscape beauty.

Farmland is seen with solar panels from Cypress Creek Renewables, Oct. 28, 2021, in Thurmont, Md. President Joe Biden plans to invoke the Defense Production Act to increase U.S. manufacturing of solar panels while declaring a two-year tariff exemption on panels from Southeast Asia.
Farmland with solar panels in 2021 at Thurmont, Maryland. AP/Julio Cortez

All told, American energy in the ground is a $50 trillion treasure chest right under our feet. The commercial value of this abundance is — nearly enough to pay off our entire national debt. We would be lunatic to leave it in the ground.

The rapid revival of America as an energy superpower under Mr. Trump should come as no surprise. This is continuation of a 15-year trend thanks to the fracking and horizontal drilling revolution that has nearly tripled America’s annual production.

Even under President Biden — who was as green as poison ivy — oil and gas production hit new highs. Yet that was mostly due to the sharp rise in oil prices when Mr. Biden became president.

Crude was higher than $100 a barrel in 2022 and generally ranged between $70 and $85 for the rest of Mr. Biden’s term. At $100 a barrel, drillers will search for oil in your backyard. 

oil rig
A pumpjack on March 30, 2022, at Tatum, New Mexico. AP/Cedar Attanasio, file

If it were not for Mr. Biden’s environmental regulations and the cancellation of vital energy infrastructure, such as the Keystone XL pipeline, we would have produced far more oil under Mr. Biden. Gas wouldn’t have gone up to $5 a gallon.

What’s impressive about the Trump oil production spike is that it’s happened even as the global spot price of oil has fallen. In other words, we’re getting the best of both worlds: made-in-America energy AND low prices at the pump. 

The Energy Information Administration reports forecasts that gas prices will keep falling to less than $3 a gallon by next year. That is, unless you live in California, where gas still costs more than $5 a gallon.

Gasoline prices are displayed on a pump at a Conoco station August 9, 2023, at Copper Mountain, Colorado. A jump in energy prices has rekindled some of the inflation pressures underlying the economy.
Gasoline prices are displayed on a pump at a Conoco station August 9, 2023, at Copper Mountain, Colorado. AP/David Zalubowski

Let’s not forget the national security benefits from this pro-drilling strategy. More American drilling means less profits for Iran, Russia, and other enemies of freedom. 

It weakens Vladimir Putin’s hand and drives him to the negotiating table since the Russian economy is dependent on natural gas exports for survival.

This story is a helpful reminder that policy directly impacts everyone’s lives, and that a president’s policies matter. One of Mr. Biden’s first executive orders was to cancel the Keystone XL pipeline to slow oil and gas delivery across the country. 

Mr. Trump rescinded the order on the first day of his second term, making oil and gas production a national security and economic priority.

As a result, we are looking at a future with America dominating global energy markets, and prices here at home continuing to fall.

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