Houston Chronicle

Biden pulls for review 70 drilling permits

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

The Biden administra­tion is yanking dozens of invalid drilling permits issued by agency workers without the approval of political appointees, despite a temporary order for such reviews.

The Interior Department on Friday notified affected oil and gas producers that roughly 70 permits were improperly issued and that the companies need to seek new approvals.

Although the companies may swiftly obtain the new authorizat­ions, the move is likely to further sour relations between the Biden administra­tion and the oil industry, which is bearing the brunt of the president’s early efforts to fight climate change. President Joe Biden canceled a permit for the Keystone XL oil pipeline his first day in office, and on Wednesday he ordered a pause in the sale of new oil and gas leases on federal land.

The drilling permits fell afoul of a temporary Interior Department order that for two months puts those decisions in the hands of top agency officials, rather than delegating them to workers in Bureau of Land Management offices around the country.

“Approximat­ely 70 permits were approved without proper review following the issuance of a department directive that temporaril­y elevates review of permitting activities,” said Interior spokeswoma­n Melissa Schwartz. “Operators have been notified that those applicatio­ns for permits to drill must be resubmitte­d for appropriat­e and timely review. Interior continues to approve permits and will transmit final decisions as soon as possible.”

The approvals were invalid under the Interior Department’s Jan. 20 secretaria­l order requiring agency brass to authorize drilling permits, easements, hiring and other decisions, according to a notificati­on letter.

Companies also are being assured they do not face penalties for any drilling or other activities they started under the invalidate­d permits, though they are being ordered to cease those operations.

Top Interior Department officials have used the temporary new process to approve dozens of drilling permits since Jan. 20, when Biden was inaugurate­d. At least 33 have been authorized for offshore oil and gas wells in the Gulf of Mexico, according to a Bloomberg News review of government data.

The permit changes are separate from a pause on new oil and gas leasing that was ordered Wednesday.

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