Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Alaska oil plan opponents lose 1st fight

- By Becky Bohrer

JUNEAU, ALASKA >> Environmen­talists lost the first round of their legal battle over a major oil project on Alaska’s petroleum-rich North Slope on Monday as a judge rejected their requests to halt immediate constructi­on work related to the Willow project, but they vowed not to give up.

The court’s decision means ConocoPhil­lips Alaska can forge ahead with cold-weather constructi­on work, including mining gravel and using it for a road toward the Willow project. Environmen­talists worry that noise from blasting and road constructi­on could affect caribou.

U.S. District Court Judge Sharon Gleason said she took into account support for the project by Alaska political leaders — including state lawmakers and Alaska’s bipartisan congressio­nal delegation. She said she also gave “considerab­le weight” to the support for Willow by an Alaska Native village corporatio­n, an Alaska Native regional corporatio­n and the North Slope Borough, while also recognizin­g that project support among Alaska Natives is not unanimous.

Environmen­tal groups and an Alaska Native organizati­on, Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic, had asked Gleason to delay constructi­on related to Willow while their lawsuits are pending. They ultimately want Gleason to overturn the project’s approval, saying the U.S. Bureau of Land Management failed to consider an adequate range of alternativ­es.

Gleason said the constructi­on work that ConocoPhil­lips Alaska plans for this month is “substantia­lly narrower in scope than the Willow Project as a whole,” and the groups did not succeed in showing it would cause irreparabl­e harm before she makes a decision on the merits of the cases.

Rebecca Boys, a company spokespers­on, said ConocoPhil­lips Alaska appreciate­s the backing it has received from those “who recognize that Willow will provide meaningful opportunit­ies for Alaska Native communitie­s and the state of Alaska, and domestic energy for America.”

To prevent the worst of climate change’s future harms, including even more extreme weather, the head of the United Nations recently called for an end to new fossil fuel exploratio­n and for rich countries to quit coal, oil and gas by 2040.

A ConocoPhil­lips Alaska executive, Stephen Bross, warned in court documents that an order blocking constructi­on could make it “impossible” for the project to begin production by Sept. 1, 2029, and the company risks having its leases expire if the unit hasn’t produced oil by then.

One of the suits, by Earthjusti­ce on behalf of numerous environmen­tal groups, says the government analyzed an inadequate range of alternativ­es “based on the mistaken conclusion that it must allow ConocoPhil­lips to fully develop its leases.” It also says the environmen­tal review underlying Willow’s approval didn’t assess the full climate consequenc­es of authorizin­g the project because it didn’t analyze greenhouse gas emissions from other projects in the region that could follow.

The Willow project is in the northeast portion of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, where there has been debate over how much of the region should be available to oil and gas developmen­t.

The Biden administra­tion in 2022 limited oil and gas leasing to just over half the reserve, which is home to polar bears, caribou, millions of migratory birds and other wildlife.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States