Biden govt blocks activist bid to slash oil output from US federal lands

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FILE PHOTO: A pump jack drills oil crude from the Yates Oilfield in West Texas’s Permian Basin near Iraan, Texas, U.S., March 17, 2023. Picture taken through glass. REUTERS/Bing Guan/File Photo

The US government said it could not dedicate its “limited resources” to establishing a phase-down programme.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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The Biden administration has formally rebuffed a bid by environmental activists to phase down oil and gas production on federal lands and waters, marking its latest nod to the endurance of fossil fuels in a warming world. 

Ms Laura Daniel-Davis, the principal deputy assistant secretary of land and mineral management at the Interior Department, said in a letter released on Thursday that the agency could not dedicate its “limited resources” to establishing a phase-down programme, given “competing priorities”, including implementing lease sales mandated by last year’s sweeping climate law. 

Ms Daniel-Davis did not address the substance of the legal and scientific arguments advanced by more than 300 environmental, community and climate groups in their 85-page rulemaking petition last year, saying only that she appreciated “the thought and effort behind” their push. “This administration shares your concerns regarding the urgency of the climate crisis and is directing its limited resources in an effort to address them,” she said.

The move drew a swift condemnation from activists who cited mounting evidence the world must stop developing new oil and gas fields to avert the most catastrophic consequences of global warming and reach net-zero emissions by 2050. 

Said Mr Taylor McKinnon of the Centre for Biological Diversity: “To claim that the Biden administration doesn’t have the resources to take real climate action on federal fossil fuels is vacuous and beyond hypocritical.

“This is the definition of lip service. The administration acknowledges the urgency to address climate change and meanwhile avoids every opportunity to take meaningful action on the fossil fuels under its control.”

The decision follows administration approvals of the ConocoPhillips’ Willow oil development in Alaska and liquefied natural gas exports from Alaska, as well as its support for provisions in the debt-ceiling deal that accelerate construction of Equitrans Midstream’s Mountain Valley gas pipeline.

On the campaign trail, President Joe Biden vowed to block new oil and gas permitting on public lands and waters, and said he would “not only end the federal leasing programmes”, but also “wind down existing federal oil and gas production”. The activists’ petition asked the Interior Department to manage a steady decline in that production, ultimately reducing output by 98 per cent as of 2035. BLOOMBERG

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