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On environment, Obama likely to keep walking middle line

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — On election night, President Barack Obama uttered a phrase that thrilled environmentalists.

“We want our children to live in an America that isn’t burdened by debt, that isn’t weakened by inequality,” Obama said, “that isn’t threatened by the destructive power of a warming planet.”

Environmental optimists run the risk, however, of ending up like a kid who expected a puppy for Christmas and got socks instead. Those in industry who think that Obama’s frequent campaign talk about the benefits of oil and gas could mean opening more land to drilling may also be disappointed.

Over the last four years, Obama charted a middle course on the environment that led to landmark pollution rules, growth in clean energy and the continued development of fossil fuels.

At least for much of this second term, there will likely be no sweeping new legislation on climate, air or water pollution, many analysts say, especially with the House of Representatives still controlled by Republicans who view environmental safeguards as economic threats. At the same time, it is unlikely that the administration will throw open vast new swaths of federal lands to oil and gas development.

“This was not a status quo election, but that doesn’t mean the president is going to move on a liberal agenda,” said Joshua Freed, vice president of the clean energy program at Third Way, a center-left Washington think tank. “Instead, what the president has done over the first term is a good road map of what to look for in his second.”

The White House and entities such as the Environmental Protection Agency, Interior and Energy departments will likely carry on the painstaking work of building out programs and regulations they began in the first term. Some analysts say an incremental approach might stand a better chance than a grand legislative effort of reshaping the country’s energy sources, cars and air and water quality.

“There are lots of smaller things you could do, and because they’re not set up as an emblematic fight, you might miss the fact that things are getting done and getting done faster,” said David Goldston, director of governmental affairs for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

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