Houston Chronicle

Gulf offshore oil lease sale scheduled for November

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NEW ORLEANS — President Joe Biden’s administra­tion says it has followed a court order to schedule an offshore oil and gas lease sale for the Gulf of Mexico after the Democratic president’s moratorium on new oil and gas leasing on federal lands was blocked by a judge.

The sale will be livestream­ed from New Orleans on Nov. 17, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management announced in a news release Thursday. Bidding will be only by mail; walk-in bids won’t be accepted, it said.

The agency postponed lease sales scheduled in March to comply with Biden’s executive order to combat climate change. Scientists urge immediate action to slash greenhouse emissions to avoid the worst consequenc­es of global warming, including devastatin­g storms, floods, wildfires and droughts.

But Louisiana and 12 other states sued, and in June a federal judge found that the government had omitted steps required for such actions. The administra­tion said in August it would comply while appealing the judge’s order.

“The Biden Harris Administra­tion is continuing its comprehens­ive review of the deficienci­es associated with its offshore and onshore oil and gas leasing programs,” the bureau’s statement said.

The sale will cover roughly 136,000 square miles located from 3 miles to 231 miles offshore in the Gulf of Mexico with water depths ranging from 9 feet to more than 11,115 feet (3 to 3,400 meters).

Less than 2 percent of available water bottom was leased in August 2020.

The agency said lease stipulatio­ns will protect biological­ly sensitive resources, mitigate potential adverse effects on protected species, and avoid potential conflicts between oil and gas developmen­t and other activities and users in the Gulf of Mexico.

Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississipp­i, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah and West Virginia joined Louisiana in challengin­g the lease sale suspension.

The scheduling “is welcome news for the American worker and our national security,” said Erik Milito, president of the National Ocean Industries Associatio­n.

“The U.S. Gulf of Mexico supports more than 345,000 jobs, many of which are accessible, high-paying and cannot be easily substitute­d, and generates vital government revenues for conservati­on and recreation programs,” he said.

And, he said, U.S. offshore oil and gas produces less carbon than imports that would be needed if U.S. wells all shut down.

Several environmen­tal groups sued Interior Secretary Debra Haaland in August, trying to prevent the sale. The lawsuit, brought by Friends Of The Earth, Healthy Gulf, the Sierra Club and the Center for Biological Diversity, contends that the bureau didn’t meet a legal requiremen­t to carefully study the sale’s environmen­tal impacts and substantia­lly underestim­ated such effects..

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