San Diego Union-Tribune

OIL COMPANIES LOCK IN RIGHTS TO BUILD NEW WELLS

Flood of permits threatens Biden’s climate agenda

- BY MATTHEW BROWN & CATHY BUSSEWITZ Brown and Bussewitz write for The Associated Press.

BILLINGS, Mont.

In the closing months of the Trump administra­tion, energy companies stockpiled enough drilling permits for Western public lands to keep pumping oil for years and undercut President-elect Joe Biden’s plans to curb new drilling because of climate change, according to public records and industry analysts.

An Associated Press analysis of government data shows that the permit stockpilin­g has centered on oilrich federal lands in New Mexico and Wyoming. It accelerate­d during the fall as Biden was cementing his polling lead over President Donald Trump and peaked in December, aided by speedier permitting approvals since Trump took office.

The goal for companies is to lock in drilling rights on oil and gas leases on vast public lands where they make royalty payments on any resources extracted. Biden wants to end new drilling on those same lands as part of his overhaul of how Americans get energy, with the goal of making the nation carbon-neutral by 2050.

Companies submitted more than 3,000 drilling permit applicatio­ns in a threemonth period that included the election, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Officials approved almost 1,400 drilling applicatio­ns during that time amid the pandemic. That’s the highest number of approvals during Trump’s four-year term, according to the AP’s analysis.

In Colorado, a dozen permits are approved or pending to drill in Pawnee National Grassland, a birding destinatio­n where wildf lowers and cactuses bloom below the buttes.

In Wyoming ’s Thunder Basin National Grassland, a prairie expanse that abounds with wildlife and offers hiking, fishing and hunting, oil companies EOG Resources and Devon Energy have permission to drill three dozen wells among fields of sage brush.

The administra­tion issued more than 4,700 drilling permits in 2020 — comparable to approval numbers from early last decade when oil topped $100 a barrel, roughly twice the current price.

Making it easier to drill was a centerpiec­e of Trump’s effort to boost American energy production in part by enticing companies onto lands and offshore areas run by the U.S. department­s of Interior and Agricultur­e.

Under Trump, crude production from federal and tribal lands and waters increased sharply, topping a billion barrels in 2019. That was up by almost a third from the last year of the Obama administra­tion.

But this year the coronaviru­s pandemic and crashing oil prices caused many companies to curtail their activity.

With markets still in f lux and oil producers slashing budgets, major companies neverthele­ss have been acquiring enough permits to keep pumping through Biden’s term. The government approved about 500 new drilling permits in September, more than double the same month in 2019.

The oil industry’s fear is that Biden will follow through on campaign pledges and make it impossible or much harder to drill on public lands. “You go from having a champion in the White

House, who steers the entire federal apparatus to wanting you to be successful, to someone who is hostile to the industry,“said Tom Pyle, a former Republican aide on Capitol Hill who now leads the industry group American Energy Alliance.

For Biden supporters, the stockpilin­g threatens parts of an ambitious climate agenda before the Democrat can get into the White House. Oil and gas extracted from public lands and waters generates the equivalent of almost 550 million tons of greenhouse gases annually, the U.S. Geological Survey said in a 2018 study.

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