Santa Fe New Mexican

Sale of Arctic refuge oil and gas leases set for January

- By Henry Fountain

The Trump administra­tion said Thursday it will sell oil and gas leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska in early January, further accelerati­ng its last-ditch effort to allow drilling there.

The Bureau of Land Management said the sale will take place Jan. 6, following the publicatio­n Monday of a notice of sale in the Federal Register.

That notice requires a 30-day comment period before a sale can occur.

The announceme­nt of a sale date came just 16 days after the bureau released a “call for nomination­s,” which allowed oil companies and others to detail which tracts of land in the refuge were of interest for drilling.

Normally, a call for nomination­s allows at least 30 days for such responses, followed by weeks of analysis by the bureau to ultimately decide which tracts will be offered. That time frame would have pushed a sale to just a few days before, or beyond, the Jan. 20 inaugurati­on of Joe Biden, who has opposed drilling in the refuge.

The announceme­nt, which came from the bureau’s Alaska offices, did not mention why the timetable had been accelerate­d. But the Trump administra­tion has made no secret of its desire to sell drilling rights in the refuge before leaving office.

Environmen­tal groups denounced the last-minute push.

“This is a shameful attempt by Donald Trump to give one last handout to the fossil fuel industry on his way out the door, at the expense of our public lands and our climate,” Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club, said in a statement.

Once the sale is held, the bureau has to review and approve the leases, a process that typically takes months. But holding the sale Jan. 6 potentiall­y gives the bureau opportunit­y to finalize the leases before Inaugurati­on Day. That would make it more difficult for the Biden administra­tion to undo them.

Environmen­tal groups said they expected Biden to do just that.

“President Biden ran on, and was elected on, the most aggressive pro-climate platform of any successful candidate in history, and he made protecting the Arctic refuge a Day One priority,” Adam Kolton, executive director of the Alaska Wilderness League, said in a statement. “We will need him to use all the tools at his disposal to stop the industrial­ization of this iconic national treasure.”

The plan to sell leases is also the subject of four lawsuits filed by environmen­tal organizati­ons, some Alaska Native groups and, in one case, a coalition of 15 states. The lawsuits contend that the Trump administra­tion took shortcuts in the leasing process and that an environmen­tal review was deeply flawed.

The Arctic refuge is a vast expanse of virtually pristine wilderness, almost untouched by people and home to migrating caribou, polar bears and other wildlife. Of the refuge’s 19 million acres, the lease sales would involve up to 1.5 million acres of the coastal plain of northeast Alaska. The environmen­tal review, which was finalized earlier this year, recommende­d that almost all of the 1.5 million acres be offered for sale.

The refuge has long been protected by environmen­talists and Congressio­nal Democrats. But in 2017, with Republican­s holding the White House and both houses of Congress, the plan to sell oil and gas leases in the coastal plain was approved as part of tax legislatio­n.

President Donald Trump has said that opening part of the refuge to oil developmen­t was among the most significan­t of his efforts to expand domestic fossil fuel production.

The coastal plain is believed to overlie one of the last remaining significan­t petroleum reserves in the United States and could potentiall­y yield billions of barrels of oil. But that assessment is decades old and relies largely on studies that used now-outdated technology to detect petroleum deposits undergroun­d.

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