Biden Administration Approves 9,779 Oil & Gas Drilling Permits Putting Endangered Species & Our Climate At-Risk

Federal data shows the Biden administration approved 9,779 permits for oil and gas drilling on public lands in its first three years, nearly keeping pace with the Trump administration’s 9,982 drilling permits that were approved.

The Biden administration’s policy of oil and gas expansion contradicts the clear climate science that fossil fuel growth must be stopped and governments must phase out fossil fuels to avoid the most catastrophic consequences of climate change. In December, the United States and other countries agreed to a phasedown and ultimate phase out of fossil fuel extraction.

“Given the urgency of the climate crisis and our nation’s pledge to phase out oil and gas extraction, the Biden administration needs to pump the brakes right now on issuing drilling permits on our public lands,” said Jeremy Nichols of the Center for Biological Diversity. “It’s time for the administration to show the world what true climate leadership looks like.”

The pace of new oil and gas drilling approvals stands in contrast to the administration’s action last week to temporarily pause new gas export projects. While met with support, the pause is not permanent and does not stem new fossil fuel production.

“The temporary pause on new gas export projects is a good step, but for it to be meaningful, the Biden administration needs to make it permanent and stop rubberstamping more fossil fuel production,” said Nichols.

More than 6,000 of the drilling permits granted by the administration are on public lands managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management’s New Mexico office, followed by 1,793 permits in Wyoming and several hundred each in Utah, Colorado, California, and North Dakota.

Scientific analyses shows climate pollution from the world’s already producing fossil fuel developments, if fully developed, will push warming past 1.5 degrees Celsius. Avoiding such warming requires ending new investment in fossil fuel projects and phasing outproduction to keep as much as 40% of already developed fields in the ground.

The Biden administration has not enacted any policies to significantly limit drilling permits or manage a decline of production to avoid 1.5 degrees of warming. It supported Senator Joe Manchin’s demands to add provisions to the Inflation Reduction Act that will lock in fossil fuel leasing for the next decade.

The administration has also ignored petitions from hundreds of climate, conservation, Indigenous, and environmental justice groups calling for a phaseout of federal oil and gas production.

In June 2023, the Interior Department rejected a petition filed by the Center for Biological Diversity and others to wind down federal fossil fuel extraction. The Center sued the Interior Department in November, over the failure of the agency to release records explaining why it denied the petition.

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