The Denver Post

Moratorium on public lands brings praise, suit

Study shows move could cost eight states $33.5B, industry group says

- By Judith Kohler

President Joe Biden’s order issued Wednesday to pause new oil and gas leasing on public lands was praised by Coloradans who see the move as crucial to fighting climate change but was immediatel­y met with a lawsuit by a Colorado-based industry group.

The order makes tackling climate change a priority and will be in place for public lands and waters while leasing and permitting practices for fossil fuel developmen­t undergo a “rigorous review.” It follows a directive issued Friday that halted new leases and permits for 60 days but allowed high-ranking Interior Department officials to approve activities on federally managed lands.

That directive is still in place.

Kelly Nordini, executive director of Conservati­on Colorado, said in a statement that Coloradans overwhelmi­ngly support addressing climate change “based in science and grounded in equity and health to protect our state now and for future generation­s.”

Gov. Jared Polis, whose goal is to see the state’s electric grid 100% carbonfree by 2040, said in a statement that Colorado will work closely with the Biden administra­tion as it reviews policies around energy developmen­t on public lands.

“And as long as the review is completed expeditiou­sly, we don’t expect an economic impact in the short-term with current market factors and the many existing unused leases and permits,” Polis said.

But the Denver-based Western Energy Alliance, an industry organizati­on, said a recent study by a Wyoming trade group shows a prolonged leasing moratorium could cost eight Western states as much as $33.5 billion over Biden’s first term and 58,676 jobs annually. The president doesn’t have the authority to ban leasing on public lands, said Kathleen Sgamma, the group’s president, and the group filed a lawsuit Wednesday to stop the executive order.

“All Americans own the oil and natural gas beneath public lands, and Congress has directed them to be responsibl­y developed on their behalf,” Sgamma said. “President Biden cannot simply ignore laws in effect for over half a century.”

The alliance filed the lawsuit in federal court in Wyoming.

The oil and gas industry shares Biden’s goal of reducing carbon emissions and has taken great strides to meet the state’s ambitious climate goals, Lynn Granger, executive director of the American Petroleum Institute-Colorado, said in a statement. Biden’s decision to suspend new leasing on federal lands is misguided, she added, “particular­ly in Colorado and across Western and Southern states where such work is integral to providing Americans with affordable, reliable energy.”

Colorado is the seventhbig­gest energy producer in the U.S. and about 36% of its lands are federally managed. Energy developmen­t occurs on both public and private lands in Colorado.

Last year, the state of Colorado received about

$57 million in mineral royalty and fee revenue from energy developmen­t on public lands in the state. States get about 50% of the money.

However, conservati­on groups and other opponents of drilling on public lands say mineral royalties and fees should be raised to give the public a fair return on its lands. The advocacy group Taxpayers for Common Sense said between 2009 and 2018, Colorado and the federal government lost out on $1.3 billion in potential revenue because of outdated royalty rates while more than 80,000 acres of public lands in the state were leased noncompeti­tively.

On top of that, drilling opponents say public lands are supposed to be managed for multiple uses and millions of acres across the West that are under lease are sitting idle. At the end of fiscal 2019, there were 2.5 million acres under lease in Colorado, but only about 1.5 million acres in production, according to federal figures.

The move to renewable energy and electric vehicles will create more jobs and help minimize the effects of climate change, including wildfires and drought, a number of Colorado organizati­ons said.

“We’re facing serious destructio­n of our lands, waters, air and wildlife, which increases the risks of disease pandemics and climate change-induced disasters,” said Gwen Lachelt, a former La Plata County commission­er and executive director of Western Leaders Network.

Brad Handler, senior fellow for public policy at the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines, said he believes the nearterm impact of the leasing moratorium will be much less than the industry says. Several companies anticipate­d a pause in leasing, which was a pledge that Biden made during the campaign, and they “filed applicatio­ns aggressive­ly and received permits,” particular­ly on public lands in the Permian Basin in southeaste­rn New Mexico.

“A few of them say they have as much as four years of running room to proceed as normal,” Handler said. “So, I think the net impact on the industry will be very small.”

If the administra­tion increases royalty rates and imposes more stringent regulation­s, “then we can consider what the longerterm impact is once we have a better sense of what they’re doing,” Handler added.

 ?? AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post ?? The rolling hills of sage along Colorado 14 south of Walden are spotted with oil and gas developmen­ts. A lot of the energy leases in this part of northcentr­al Colorado are on public land.
AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post The rolling hills of sage along Colorado 14 south of Walden are spotted with oil and gas developmen­ts. A lot of the energy leases in this part of northcentr­al Colorado are on public land.

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