Bush: US should open overseas markets to US oil, gas | Inquirer News

Bush: US should open overseas markets to US oil, gas

/ 07:49 PM September 29, 2015

FILE - In this Sept. 24, 2015, file photo, Republican presidential candidate former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush speaks to local South Carolina republicans during the East Cooper Republican Women's Club Annual Shrimp Dinner at Alhambra Hall in Mt. Pleasant, S.C. Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush says ending the ban on U.S. oil exports and easing restrictions on natural gas exports will unleash the nation’s economy. Bush is scheduled to discuss the plan at Rice Energy near Pittsburgh, Pa., Tuesday, Sept. 29. (AP Photo/Mic Smith, File)

In this Sept. 24 photo, Republican presidential candidate former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush speaks to local South Carolina republicans during the East Cooper Republican Women’s Club Annual Shrimp Dinner at Alhambra Hall in Mt. Pleasant, S.C. AP

DES MOINES, Iowa—Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush says ending the ban on US oil exports and easing restrictions on natural gas exports would unleash the nation’s economy.

The former Florida governor is calling for ending the 1970s-era law prohibiting the US from exporting crude oil at a time when domestic petroleum production has grown rapidly over the past decade.

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Calling it a “once-in-a-generation opportunity,” Bush says in a piece posted Tuesday on the website Medium that reversing the export ban and widening US natural gas markets would benefit US consumers with lower energy costs, create a new manufacturing sector and generally fuel more rapid growth in the nation’s economy.

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Once the presumed front-runner in the large Republican presidential candidate field, Bush now is fighting for traction among more than a dozen rivals led by billionaire Donald Trump. The billionaire real estate mogul has been slower to introduce policy as he campaigns for the White House, although he unveiled a proposal to overhaul tax policy on Monday.

The energy proposals not only could help Bush take the policy mantle, it provides an opportunity to again take aim at Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton, who leads in national preference polls for her party’s presidential nomination.

Clinton, campaigning last week in Iowa, announced that she opposes completion of the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry Canadian petroleum to refineries in Texas.

Bush supports completion of the pipeline, a popular rallying cry for Republican voters. But reversing the 40-year-old crude export ban is also popular with Republicans.

“Lifting the ban on crude oil exports and liberalizing natural gas exports would create hundreds of thousands of additional jobs and significantly lower net energy costs,” Bush writes.

The vast majority of economists agree, according to a survey by The Associated Press last year. More exports would encourage investment in oil and gas production and transport, create jobs, make oil and gas supplies more stable and reduce the US trade deficit, they say.

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Just last week, the Energy Committee in the Republican-controlled US House approved a bill that would lift the ban. That move sets up a likely vote in the full House on a measure that President Barack Obama, a Democrat, opposes.

Opponents say lifting the ban would be a huge benefit to the nation’s petroleum industry while providing only a small drop in prices at the pump.

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TAGS: Donald Trump, Jeb Bush

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