Interior Secretary and former North Dakota governor says states, not federal agencies or Congress, will drive energy development under the new administration.
President Donald Trump has launched an âall-of-governmentâ regulatory reform blitz designed to trim permitting times for energy projects by half, not just for economic development, but for the United States to have robust energy infrastructure to win an existential race with China in mastering the artificial intelligence (AI) that will define the 21st century, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said Feb. 21.
Without dramatically accelerated energy development of all typesâespecially base-load fossil fuels and nuclearâthe former North Dakota governor told 48 of the nationâs 55 state and territorial governors attending the National Governors Association (NGA) 2025 Winter Meeting in Washington, âWe will lose the AI arms race.
âWe can be ahead in technology, but if we lose on the power generation side, we still lose that AI race,â Burgum said.
That is where governors must lead, he said. The states, not federal agencies and Congress, are the spearhead, the drivers in energy development, something Trump acknowledges in his administrationâs commitment to clear away tiers of bureaucratic clutter to âunleash American energy,â Burgum said.
In canvassing the nationâs energy leaders as Interior secretary and chair of the newly created National Energy Dominance Council, all want the government to move at âthe speed of business,â he said.
âHow long does it take to build a pipeline? How long does it take to build a key piece of energy infrastructure?â Burgum continued. CEOs âgive me a number and Iâm like, I canât go in a meeting with the president and tell him that because he wants that to be half of that time. He wants to cut these times in half.
âWe have the speed of government and then thereâs a new thingâthe speed of Trump. He expects [federal agencies] to go faster than the states and faster than business.â
The president wants governors to have the throttleâand whatever federal resources they needâat their fingertips, Burgum said.
âYour role as governors is key to driving America forward,â Burgum said. âGive us every idea you have because we have to go fasterânot just for reasons of affordability for the American people and for economic opportunity and creating better jobs. Itâs because weâre in a competition against other countries who donât have the same level of bureaucracy.
âWhen we generate energy here, itâs cleaner, safer, smarter than anywhere in the world,â he said. âWhen we do that, itâs good for the global environment, itâs good for our economy, and itâs good for our allies. We want to champion innovation over regulation.â
âIt shouldnât take longer to approve a project than it takes to build it,â Stitt said. âPermitting reform is one of those issues where both Republicans and Democrats recognize the problem. We largely agree on solutions and Congress gets close year after year to doing something, but somehow it just never crosses the finish line. The U.S. is among the slowest nations in the developed world in approving infrastructure projectsâparticularly when it comes to energy.â
Permitting delays weaken U.S. economic growth, security, and competitiveness, he said.
âSo I was like, thereâs no way I can let a Democratic governor beat me on something like this. So I signed and got an executive order [that] copied his,â Stitt said. âItâs a great idea, and I required all of my government agencies to have their permits done in 30 days, or itâs free to the business.â

Scrap steel piles up after the dismantling of PacifiCorp’s coal-fired Carbon Power Plant in Helper, Utah, on Feb. 1, 2017. The 62-year-old plant was closed due to the high cost of complying with the Environmental Protection Agency’s mercury-emissions rules. George Frey/Stringer/Getty Images
âEnergy Additionâ Not Transition
Burgum said Trumpâs national energy emergency declaration is not about favoring one form of energy generation over another but about boosting electrical capacity as quickly, as inexpensively, as reliably as possible. And that, he said, will require more fossil fuels, especially natural gas.
âWe are not in a point of an energy transition. We need energy addition,â he said. âWe can have all the wind we want, but on the days when the wind isnât blowing, the sunâs not shining, we also need an entire other investment around base load, whether itâs nuclear, whether itâs hydro, whether itâs geothermal, and whether itâs the fossil fuels that we need right now just to power our country. We canât run a full-time society on part-time power.â
Intermittent energy sources feeding the grid is fine, Burgum said, but the Biden administrationâs emphasis on, and subsidization of, renewable energies has created an imbalance that imperils the nationâs capacity to expand a grid that will need to double in size in the coming decade.
âOne of the main reasons why President Trump declared a national energy emergency wasnât just the price at the pump. It was that weâre in a dangerous situation where demand is going up at record levels for electricity, and thatâs driven a lot by AI,â he said.
With as many as 100 coal-fired power plants across the nation shuttering because of emission rules adopted under the Biden administration, the nationâs capacity to meet the growing need for electricity is being imperiled just when that production is needed most, he said.
âThe way that we prevent this catastropheâ is âto get going,â Burgum said. âWeâve got to get every electrical plant in the country to produce more [to] expand by 10 or 15 percent.
âWe want to do that,â he continued. âIf we can permit new plants and new construction, we need to do that. Transmission lines, natural gas pipelines, all of this infrastructure has to happen for us to be able to deliver energy, to help produce electricity, heat homes, keep the lights on across the country.â
And, Burgum said, to win a war China is overtly waging on the United States while the nation fiddles away time in self-induced permitting and litigative limbos.
âItâs key that we win the AI arms race with China because if China gets ahead of us in the AI arms race and they launch agentic attacksâmeaning that the AI can keep trying to break a code, break a code, break a code, keep going; itâs sort of like robot software, developers coming at you, coming at you, coming at youâthey would have the ability to take down our electric grid, the ability to disrupt everything we know in our country,â he said. âThey wouldnât have to put a single soldier on the groundâ to âcompletely disrupt us in our economy.â
Winning this existential war means powering up fast, Burgum said.
âWinning that AI arms race doesnât just take software developersâit takes more electricity,â he said.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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