Houston Chronicle

Environmen­talists sue to block Trump’s offshore drilling order

- By Dan Joling

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Less than a week after President Donald Trump took steps to put U.S. Arctic and Atlantic waters back in play for offshore drilling, 10 environmen­tal and Alaska Native groups sued Wednesday to maintain the ban on oil and gas exploratio­n.

The ban was a key part of former President Barack Obama’s environmen­tal legacy, aimed at protecting polar bears, walrus, ice seals and Native villages that depend on them from industrial­ization and oil spills. Waters of the Atlantic continenta­l shelf also support whales, swordfish, bluefin tuna, sea turtles and businesses heavily dependent on the health of the ocean ecosystem, according to the lawsuit.

In an executive order Friday, Trump ordered Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke to review the withdrawal with the goal of expanded drilling.

The federal lawsuit filed in Anchorage claims Trump exceeded his constituti­onal authority and violated federal law. No president before Trump has tried to undo or reverse a permanent halt to drilling in outer continenta­l shelf areas, said Kristen Monsell, an attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity.

“With one careless stroke of his pen, Trump ignored the law and put our oceans at new risk of a devastatin­g oil spill,” Monsell said.

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Trump on Friday said the executive order started the process of opening offshore areas to job-creating energy exploratio­n.

“It reverses the previous administra­tion’s Arctic leasing ban and directs Secretary Zinke to allow responsibl­e developmen­t of offshore areas that will bring revenue to our treasury and jobs to our workers,” he said.

The lawsuit claims Trump’s order violates the U.S. Constituti­on and the Outer Continenta­l Shelf Lands Act.

Congress has the power to regulate federal land under the Constituti­on. Lawmakers have authorized the president to halt drilling in unleased lands of the outer continenta­l shelf but did not allow him to reopen areas, according the lawsuit.

Likewise, the Outer Continenta­l Shelf Lands Act itself does not authorize a president to cancel permanent bans, said Erik Grafe, an attorney for Earthjusti­ce in Anchorage.

“It says nothing about the authority to undo those withdrawal­s,” Grafe said. “No president has reversed a withdrawal in the past except for ones that have express end dates. President Obama’s withdrawal­s were permanent.”

Obama halted oil and gas leasing in most of the U.S. waters in the Arctic and key parts of the Atlantic in response to strong national opposition, Monsell said.

“The Arctic Ocean is not a rational place to drill for oil,” Grafe said.

 ?? James Brooks / Kodiak Daily Mirror / Associated Press file ?? The Shell floating drill rig Kulluk is in Kiliuda Bay in 2013 as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthin­ess after it ran aground off an island near Kodiak. President Donald Trump took steps last week to put U.S. Arctic and...
James Brooks / Kodiak Daily Mirror / Associated Press file The Shell floating drill rig Kulluk is in Kiliuda Bay in 2013 as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthin­ess after it ran aground off an island near Kodiak. President Donald Trump took steps last week to put U.S. Arctic and...

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