08/21/2025 / By Willow Tohi
U.S. oil output hits all-time highs under President Donald Trump’s pro-energy policies, defying Biden-era constraints. The Trump administration reverses Biden’s climate agenda at unprecedented speed, prioritizing domestic energy dominance. Gasoline prices are now forecasted to drop below $3 per gallon next year, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA).
The shift marks a dramatic reversal from the Biden era, when production was driven not by policy but by high global oil prices—often exceeding $60 per barrel, a testament to the administration’s aggressive deregulation and pro-drilling stance. “Drill, baby, drill is working,” declared the Committee to Unleash Prosperity in an August report, noting that Trump’s policies have tripled U.S. output in 15 years through advances in fracking and horizontal drilling.
The stakes extend beyond economics. Trump’s energy revival is a direct rebuttal to the globalist push for “net-zero” emissions, which critics argue would cripple the U.S. economy while enriching foreign adversaries like China. “This isn’t just about cheap gas—it’s about national security,” said Alex Stevens, communications director for the Institute for Energy Research. “Biden’s first act was killing Keystone XL. Trump’s first act was declaring energy a national priority.”
Trump’s second-term energy offensive has moved faster than his first, with 200 deregulatory actions logged in just 200 days—double the pace of his initial presidency. Key moves include:
The American Energy Alliance (AEA), which tracked Biden’s 250 anti-energy actions, now documents Trump’s 200 pro-energy countermeasures—from lease sales in Alaska’s ANWR to rolling back EV mandates. “Biden spent four years making energy harder to produce. Trump spent six months making it impossible to stop,” Stevens said.
Yet challenges loom. Environmental groups and blue-state attorneys general are gearing up for litigation, particularly over the EPA’s proposed repeals. “The next 200 days will be about defending these actions in court,” Stevens predicted.
Biden’s energy legacy was defined by restriction, not production. His administration:
The result? U.S. production grew despite Biden, not because of him, driven by high prices and private-sector resilience. “Biden’s policies were a tax on American energy,” said Dan Kish, senior vice president at the Institute for Energy Research. “Trump removed the tax—and the market responded.”
Now, with Trump’s deregulation, the EIA forecasts:
Trump’s energy policies clash with the World Economic Forum’s “Great Reset” and the Paris Climate Accord’s net-zero goals, both of which demand drastic reductions in fossil fuel use. Critics argue these agendas prioritize globalist control over American sovereignty, with policies like:
“The climate industrial complex wants to make energy scarce and expensive,” said Steve Milloy, a former Trump EPA transition team member. “Trump’s plan is the opposite: abundant, affordable energy that powers the economy without apology.”
Yet the fight isn’t over. The EPA’s proposed repeals—including the endangerment finding—will face fierce legal challenges from environmental groups. And while Trump’s policies have unleashed production, long-term success depends on sustaining deregulation and resisting globalist pressure to reimpose climate restrictions.
The next phase of Trump’s energy agenda hinges on three key battles:
For now, the data is clear: Trump’s policies work. Production is up, prices are down and America is reclaiming its role as the world’s energy superpower. Whether this revival lasts depends on whether the American people demand energy freedom—or surrender to the globalist vision of scarcity and control.
The 2024 election wasn’t just a choice between two presidents—it was a referendum on America’s energy future. Under Biden, the U.S. inched toward European-style energy austerity, with skyrocketing costs and reliance on foreign supply chains. Under Trump, the nation has reasserted its dominance, proving that pro-growth policies—not climate dogma—deliver prosperity.
As the legal and political battles rage, one question remains: Will America stay the course toward energy independence, or will the globalists regain the upper hand? The answer will shape not just the economy, but the very fabric of American freedom.
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Tagged Under:
affordable energy, Biden, big government, climate, energy, energy freedom, energy report, energy supply, freedom, globalism, green tyranny, Net Zero, Oil and gas, power, supply chain, Trump
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