Current:Home > MyThe Biden Administration Rethinks its Approach to Drilling on Public Lands in Alaska, Soliciting Further Review -DataFinance
The Biden Administration Rethinks its Approach to Drilling on Public Lands in Alaska, Soliciting Further Review
View
Date:2025-04-11 18:46:14
The Biden administration will give the public a new opportunity to weigh in on a major oil project proposed in the Alaskan Arctic, handing a victory to environmental groups that have opposed the development.
In an announcement late Thursday, the Bureau of Land Management said it would solicit comments about the Willow project, which would pump about 590 million barrels of oil over 30 years from a rapidly-warming ecosystem on Alaska’s North Slope.
The ConocoPhillips project was approved in the final months of the Trump administration, but its future was thrown into doubt after a federal court in Alaska vacated the approval last year and sent the project back to the BLM for further environmental review. The Biden administration initially supported the project by defending it in court, but then declined to appeal last year’s ruling.
Climate advocates had called on the BLM to open a public “scoping period” as part of the court-ordered review of Willow, and they said Thursday’s announcement was a sign that the Biden administration may be taking their concerns seriously.
“The agency is going to start from the very beginning to assess the project,” said Layla Hughes, an attorney with Earthjustice, an environmental law nonprofit that represented Indigenous and climate advocates in one of two lawsuits challenging the project that led to last year’s court ruling.
Hughes and other advocates had described Willow as a major test for the Biden administration’s climate policy, and had expressed concern that the BLM was conducting a narrow review in response to the court ruling, rather than taking a broader look at environmental and climate impacts. Advocates argue that such a review would show that the project should not proceed at all, given the urgency of limiting global warming and protecting a melting Arctic.
With Thursday’s announcement, Hughes said, “the agency is basically signaling its intent to meaningfully assess the project. Whether or not it does, we’ll have to see.”
Michelle Van Der Linden, the bureau’s acting press secretary, said in an emailed statement that it had opened the process to public input to help inform the draft supplemental environmental impact statement it is preparing, and that “we will have a formal review and comment opportunity, including public meetings, following the release of the draft.” The BLM said that release would come sometime this spring.
Rebecca Boys, a spokeswoman for ConocoPhillips, said the company “remains committed to Willow as the next significant North Slope project, and we encourage BLM to proceed in a manner that will minimize additional delay.”
Construction of the Willow project would erect pipelines, roads, a processing facility and up to 250 wells in a section of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, a 23 million-acre parcel on the North Slope that is managed by the federal government and partially open to oil development.
The announcement of the scoping period, which will run through Mar. 9, comes one week after a federal district court struck down an offshore oil and gas lease sale that the Biden administration held last year. The two cases hinged on the same central argument: that the government had failed to fully account for the greenhouse gas emissions that would result from drilling on public lands.
Taken together, the rulings cut to the heart of what advocates say is cognitive dissonance in the Biden administration’s climate and energy policies, pursuing an ambitious climate agenda in Congress and internationally, even as it continues to allow fossil fuel development on public lands.
As a candidate for president, Joe Biden pledged to end new oil and gas drilling on federal lands and waters, and his administration placed a temporary pause on leasing soon after he took office. But that moratorium was struck down by a federal court last year, and the administration responded by issuing the largest offshore lease sale in history. The administration has also continued approving new oil and gas permits at a rapid pace.
But this series of court rulings—on the offshore lease sale, the Willow Project, and on a separate Alaska project—have effectively said the administration can no longer ignore the link between individual fossil fuel developments and their impact on the global climate picture.
After the ruling on the offshore lease sale last week, an Interior Department spokeswoman said the administration had identified “serious deficiencies” in the oil and gas program and needed to make “significant and long overdue” reforms. Advocates are hoping those comments, and the decision now to open the Willow project to public input, are a signal it may change course.
“I think the administration is acknowledging the disconnect between its obligations to protect our public lands and its current program of oil and gas leasing and development,” Hughes said.
veryGood! (97)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Inside Kirsten Dunst's Road to Finding Love With Jesse Plemons
- Kate Middleton and Prince William Celebrate 13th Wedding Anniversary With Never-Before-Seen Photo
- GaxEx Global Perspective: Breaking through Crypto Scams, Revealing the Truth about Exchange Profits
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Texans receiver Tank Dell suffers minor wound in shooting at Florida party venue, team says
- Democrats start out ahead in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin 2024 Senate races — CBS News Battleground Tracker poll
- Where's Wally? Emotional support alligator who gives hugs and kisses is missing in Georgia
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ hits No. 1, with songs claiming the top 14 spots
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Jill Duggar Shares Unseen Baby Bump Photos After Daughter Isla Marie's Stillbirth
- Retired Yankees announcer John Sterling was so much more than a friendly voice on the radio
- Congress honors deceased Korean War hero with lying in honor ceremony
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Growing wildfire risk leaves states grappling with how to keep property insurers from fleeing
- Britney and Jamie Spears settlement avoids long, potentially ugly and revealing trial
- Growing wildfire risk leaves states grappling with how to keep property insurers from fleeing
Recommendation
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Williams-Sonoma must pay $3.2 million for falsely claiming products were Made in the USA
Over 80,000 pounds of deli meat recalled across multiple states due to lacking inspection
Feds open preliminary investigation into Ford's hands-free driving tech BlueCruise
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
Report: NFL veteran receiver Jarvis Landry to join Jaguars rookie camp in comeback bid
Britney and Jamie Spears settlement avoids long, potentially ugly and revealing trial
A Colorado woman was reported missing on Mother’s Day 2020. Her death was just ruled a homicide