Biden administration grants Louisiana power to approve carbon capture wells

FILE - EPA Administrator Michael Regan stands near the Marathon Petroleum Refinery as he conducts a television interview, while touring neighborhoods that abut the refinery, in Reserve, La., Nov. 16, 2021. The Biden administration is granting Louisiana's request to administer its own permit program for wells that store carbon dioxide. It will be just the third state to take over that job from the EPA. The EPA said the Louisiana agreement includes safeguards to protect poorer, often majority-Black communities that live near those facilities. Regan said Thursday, Dec. 28, 2023, "It can be done in a way that builds in environmental justice principles that allow for the community to participate in the process and ensures that these communities are safe." (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

The Biden administration is handing Louisiana regulators new power to attract and approve carbon capture projects at a time when the state’s influential energy sector wants to make the Gulf Coast a hub for the rapidly expanding industry.

Louisiana will be able to issue permits for wells that store carbon dioxide, a critical component of carbon capture and removal technology. In all but two other states, the °µÍø½ûÇøal Protection Agency is responsible for permitting. Proponents of the change say it will speed up approvals of new projects that are critical for reducing

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