Lodi News-Sentinel

States sue over Trump decision to restart coal leases

- By Matt Volz

HELENA, Mont. — Four U.S. states filed a lawsuit Tuesday over President Donald Trump’s decision to restart the sale of coal leases on federal lands, saying the Obama-era block of the leasing program was reversed without studying what’s best for the environmen­t and for taxpayers.

The attorneys general of California, New Mexico, New York and Washington, all Democrats, said bringing back the federal coal lease program without an environmen­tal review risks worsening the effects of climate change on those states while shortchang­ing them for the coal taken from public lands.

“Climate change has to be considered when we are talking about compensati­ng states and New Mexico citizens for their resources,” said Cholla Khoury, New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas’ director of consumer and environmen­tal protection.

The U.S. Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management administer­s 306 coal leases in 10 states, producing more than 4 billion tons of coal over the past decade. Most of that coal — 85 percent — comes from the Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana.

Production and combustion of coal from federal lands accounted for about 11 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2014.

The Obama administra­tion blocked the sale of new leases in 2016 to conduct an environmen­tal study and a review of the royalties that mining companies pay the U.S. government for coal that’s extracted. Federal officials and members of Congress said the current royalty rates were shortchang­ing taxpayers.

In January, Interior officials said they were considerin­g raising those royalty rates to offset the effects of climate change from burning the coal.

In March, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke to amend or withdraw the coal leasing program moratorium.

The next day, Zinke did so, saying the Obama administra­tion’s environmen­tal review would cost “many millions of dollars” and that improvemen­ts to the program can be made without a full-scale environmen­tal review.

The lawsuit by the four attorneys general, which was filed in Great Falls, Montana, says the reversal was made “with no justificat­ion other than an objection to the time and cost of complying with the law.”

Lifting the moratorium without properly considerin­g the environmen­tal effects or ensuring that the program is providing fair market value for the publicly owned coal violates federal laws, they allege.

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