The Telegram (St. John's)

U.S. to ease oil drilling controls protecting imperiled bird

- BY MATTHEW BROWN

The Trump administra­tion moved forward Thursday with plans to ease restrictio­ns on oil and natural gas drilling and other activities across millions of acres in the American West that were put in place to protect an imperiled bird species.

Land management documents released by the U.S. Interior Department show the administra­tion intends to open more public lands to leasing and allow waivers for drilling to encroach into the habitat of greater sage grouse.

Critics warned the changes could wipe out grouse colonies as drilling disrupts breeding grounds. Federal officials under President Barack Obama in 2015 had adopted a sweeping set of land use restrictio­ns intended to benefit the birds.

Interior Deputy Secretary David Bernhardt said the agency was responding to requests by states to give them more flexibilit­y in how public lands are managed. He said the goal to conserve sage grouse was unchanged.

“I completely believe that these plans are leaning forward on the conservati­on of sage grouse,” Bernhardt told The Associated Press. “Do they do it in exactly the same way? No. We made some change in the plans and got rid of some things that are simply not necessary.”

The changes drew a sharp backlash from conservati­on groups and wildlife advocates, who warned excessive use of drilling waivers could push the birds onto the endangered species list.

“If you allow exception after exception, that might make sense for a particular project in a particular spot, but you add them all together and you have death by a thousand cuts,” said National Wildlife Associatio­n vice-president Tracy Stonemanni­ng.

The ground-dwelling grouse ranges across about 700,000 square kilometres in parts of 11 Western U.S. states and two Canadian provinces. Its numbers have plummeted in recent decades.

Under President Donald Trump, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has vowed to lift obstacles to drilling, and grouse protection­s have long been viewed by the energy industry as an obstacle to developmen­t.

Sage grouse are large, grounddwel­ling birds known for an elaborate mating ritual in which males strut around breeding grounds with large, puffed-out air sacs protruding from their chests.

They once numbered in the millions. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service now estimates the population at 200,000 to 500,000. Energy developmen­t, disease and other causes have decimated population­s in some areas.

The Trump administra­tion’s proposal would reverse or modify the Obama-era protection­s in seven states — Wyoming, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, California, Idaho and Oregon.

The oil and gas industry chafed at the old rules. Once Trump took office, industry representa­tives pushed the administra­tion to give more recognitio­n to changes in drilling practices that reduce how much land is disturbed for wells.

“We can do both — protect sage grouse and move forward with responsibl­e energy developmen­t,” said Kathleen Sgamma with the Western Energy Alliance, which represents more than 300 oil and gas companies. “We’ve reduced the size of well pads, reduced the numbers of wells. And we had done all these things and the prior administra­tion assumed developmen­t was taking place like it was 20 years ago.

Governors from several western states previously raised concerns over a related federal directive that would limit a type of land swap that can be used to preserve habitat for the birds.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? The Trump administra­tion is advancing plans to ease restrictio­ns on oil and gas drilling and other activities on huge swaths of land in the American West that were put in place to protect an imperiled bird species.
AP PHOTO The Trump administra­tion is advancing plans to ease restrictio­ns on oil and gas drilling and other activities on huge swaths of land in the American West that were put in place to protect an imperiled bird species.

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