New Lawsuit Challenges Biden Administration’s Resumption Of Oil & Gas Leasing On Public Lands That Began On June 29th

Climate and conservation groups filed a lawsuit recently challenging the Biden administration’s resumption of oil and gas leasing on public lands that began on June 29th. These are the first auctions since the president paused leasing shortly after taking office.

The lawsuit challenges the approval by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to allow oil and gas lease sales across 128,510 acres of public land in Colorado, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Utah, and Wyoming. More than 119,000 of those acres are in Wyoming threatening wildlife.

“Overwhelming scientific evidence shows us that burning fossil fuels from existing leases on federal lands is incompatible with a livable climate,”  Melissa Hornbein, senior attorney with the Western Environmental Law Center, said in a statement. “In spite of this administration’s climate commitments, the Department of the Interior is choosing to resume oil and gas leasing. The very least the BLM could do is acknowledge the connected nature of these six lease sales and their collective impact on federal lands and the earth’s climate. Its failure to do so is an attempt to water down the climate effects of their decision to continue leasing and is a clear abdication of its responsibilities under the National Environmental Policy Act.”

The groups assert that the BLM has violated environmental laws by continuing to authorize fossil fuel leasing on public lands. The challenged lease sales are expected to result in billions of dollars in social and environmental harm, including damage to public health, air and water quality, as well as threatened and endangered species such as embattled greater sage grouse.

“We’re out of time, and our climate can’t afford any new fossil fuel extraction,” stated Taylor McKinnon from the Center for Biological Diversity. “By leasing more public land for fossil fuel extraction when we should be phasing it out, President Biden is breaking campaign promises and falling dangerously short of the global leadership required to avoid catastrophic climate change.”

The lawsuit cites a failure of the U.S. Interior Department and BLM to uphold their responsibility under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, which requires the Interior to prevent “permanent impairment” and “unnecessary or undue degradation” of public lands from oil and gas development.

The lawsuit also calls for the BLM to prepare a comprehensive environmental impact statement. That report should analyze the compatibility of predicted increased greenhouse gas emissions with the urgent need to avoid the catastrophe of 1.5 degrees Celsius of global warming, rather than in the piecemeal analysis the BLM used.

“President Biden came into office promising bold action on climate. Moving forward with these lease sales flies in the face of science and any chance for us to meet our climate goals,” noted Dan Ritzman, director of Sierra Club’s Lands, Water, Wildlife campaign. “For the sake of our environment and our future, we must transition away from the toxic fossil fuel industry that prioritizes handouts to oil and gas companies over the interests of local communities, wildlife, and conservation efforts.”

Several analyses show that climate pollution from the world’s fossil fuel developments have the potential to push warming past 1.5 degrees Celsius. Avoiding such warming requires ending new investment in fossil fuel projects and phasing out production to keep as much as 40% of already-developed fields in the ground.

“While people are getting gouged at the pump by greedy oil and gas companies, the Biden administration is bending over backward to give more breaks to the industry and sell public lands for fracking,” said Jeremy Nichols, climate and energy program director for WildEarth Guardians. “This isn’t just undermining our climate, it’s undermining our nation’s ability to transition away from costly fossil fuels and toward cleaner, more affordable energy.”

Thousands of organizations and communities from across the U.S. have called on President Biden to halt federal fossil fuel expansion, phase out production consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, and develop new rules under long-ignored legal authorities to serve those goals.

“While the pain at the gas pump is real, selling more of our public lands to Big Oil will not lower prices, but will lock the U.S. into decades of GHG-spewing projects with much more damaging, long-term climate and water impacts to our communities, economy, and environment,” said Marc Yaggi, CEO of Waterkeeper Alliance. “To preserve any chance of mitigating the ongoing climate catastrophe, President Biden must honor his pledge to ban all new leasing of our public lands.”

“Southwestern Colorado has already warmed by 1.5 degrees Celsius with hotter temperatures and dangerous drying that’s harming rivers, forests, wildlife, agriculture, and rural communities,” said Natasha Léger, executive director of Citizens for a Healthy Community in Paonia. “It is beyond reckless to sell any more fossil fuel leases anywhere, especially in regions like ours that’ve already warmed by 1.5 Celsius and that already suffer impacts from existing oil and gas extraction. Public lands that have already warmed 1.5 degrees should be categorically ineligible for leasing.”

Conservation groups earlier this month filed a lawsuit challenging the Biden administration’s 3,525 drilling permit approvals in the Permian and Powder River basins. The Biden administration approved more drilling permits in 2021 than President Trump did in the first year of his presidency, according to federal data analyzed by the Center for Biological Diversity.

The June lease sales come amid record oil and gas industry profit-taking. The watchdog organization Accountable.us reported in February that Shell, Chevron, BP and Exxon made more than $75.5 billion in profits in 2021, some of their highest profits in the past decade. Major oil companies also reported billions in profits in the first quarter of 2022.

You can help all animals and our planet by choosing compassion on your plate and in your glass. #GoVeg

You can help all animals and our planet by choosing compassion on your plate and in your glass. #GoVeg

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