The Daily Courier

Biden angers activists by approving Alaska gas project

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WASHINGTON — U.S. President Joe Biden, a vocal champion of combating climate change, is angering environmen­tal allies by approving a controvers­ial oil and gas project in Alaska.

The Willow project, as it’s known, will allow energy giant ConocoPhil­lips to develop three drill sites in Alaska’s petroleumr­ich North Slope region.

The Department of the Interior is framing Sunday’s announceme­nt as “substantia­lly” reducing the scope of the project, which originally called for five well sites.

The decision also requires ConocoPhil­lips to relinquish drilling rights on roughly 275 square kilometres of land in the region, known as the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.

That hasn’t quelled criticism from climate activists who consider the project a “carbon bomb” that could produce 300 million tonnes of pollution and foster fossil fuel dependence.

Sierra Club executive director Ben Jealous says it’s impossible to overstate the negative impact a massive fossil fuel project on public land could have on the fight against climate change.

“The carbon pollution it will spew into the air will have devastatin­g effects for our communitie­s, wildlife, and the climate,” Jealous said in a statement.

“We will suffer the consequenc­es of this for decades to come.”

To soften the political blow, the administra­tion is moving to limit further developmen­t in the region, protecting more than 52,000 square kilometres already designated as ecological­ly “special areas.”

Biden is also banning future offshore oil and gas leases in a swath of about 11,500 square kilometres beneath the waves of the Arctic Ocean.

Jealous says while the Sierra Club supports the “unparallel­ed” new protection­s in the Arctic, green-lighting Willow could mean it’s all for naught.

“The decision to approve the Willow project may very well wipe out many of these climate and ecological benefits,” he said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Aerial photo shows an explorator­y drilling camp at the proposed site of the Willow oil project on Alaska’s North Slope.
The Associated Press Aerial photo shows an explorator­y drilling camp at the proposed site of the Willow oil project on Alaska’s North Slope.

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