The Guardian (USA)

Trump kick-starts oil drilling licence sales in Arctic refuge

- Peter Beaumont

The Trump administra­tion has formally announced the go-ahead for the fiercely opposed sale of controvers­ial gas and oil drilling licences in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

The refuge is a pristine wilderness and home to polar bears, caribou and many other wildlife species.

The sale of leases is planned for 6 January 2021, a few days before Trump leaves the White House.

While the Trump administra­tion was known to be pushing ahead with the plans, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) confirmed in a press release on Thursday that it would publish a notice of the sale on Monday 7 December – timed to be just ahead of the inaugurati­on of the US president-elect, Joe Biden, who opposes the move.

The announceme­nt came earlier than expected and ahead of the end of the public comments process. The sale would be conducted via video livestream, according to the BLM.

Trump had authorised sales of the gas and oil leases in the Alaska national park in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, which he signed into law that year, calling for two leases of at least 400,000 acres each within the refuge’s coastal plain.

“Congress directed us to hold lease sales in the ANWR coastal plain, and we have taken a significan­t step in announcing the first sale in advance of the December 2021 deadline set by law,” said Chad Padgett, BLM Alaska state director, in the statement issued in Anchorage, Alaska.

The statement added: “Oil and gas from the coastal plain is an important resource for meeting our nation’s long-term energy demands and will help create jobs and economic opportunit­ies.

“The law makes oil and gas developmen­t one of the purposes of the refuge, clearly directing the secretary, acting through the Bureau of Land Management, to carry out a competitiv­e leasing program for the potentiall­y energy rich coastal plain.”

Adam Kolton, head of the Alaska Wilderness League, said in a statement: “President Trump’s electoral fate has been sealed and his days in office are numbered, making an Arctic Refuge lease sale yet another dangerous political favour that lacks broad public support or legal credibilit­y.”

The coastal plain encompasse­s about 1.6m acres, and makes up about 8% of the refuge.

While some experts think that the expedited timeline on the lease sales could help challenges in court against the drilling plans, others are concerned that if the leases are finalised before Biden’s inaugurati­on they might be difficult to unpick.

The drilling is opposed by environmen­tal groups and some Alaska native communitie­s who have warned about the potential impact on caribou herds, who calve in the spring in the coastal plain.

“Oil and gas drilling could wipe out polar bears on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in our lifetimes,” said Jamie Rappaport Clark, president and chief executive of Defenders of Wildlife.

Communitie­s in the region say they will also be disproport­ionately affected by the leasing of Arctic lands to oil and gas companies.

The Trump administra­tion has continued to push ahead with its plans despite the refusal of US financial institutio­ns, most recently Bank of America, to finance oil drilling in the Arctic region.

Bank of America’s announceme­nt this week meant that it joined otherbig American banks, including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Chase, Wells Fargo, and Citi, with similar policies.

Larry Di Rita, head of public policy for the bank, told Bloomberg on Monday: “There’s been misunderst­anding around our position, but we have not historical­ly participat­ed in project finance for oil and gas exploratio­n in the Arctic.”

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? Polar bears, at home in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge – an area the Trump administra­tion has designated as an oil and gas drilling site.
Photograph: AP Polar bears, at home in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge – an area the Trump administra­tion has designated as an oil and gas drilling site.
 ?? Photograph: AP ?? Caribou on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Environmen­tal groups are fiercely opposed to exploitati­on of the region.
Photograph: AP Caribou on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Environmen­tal groups are fiercely opposed to exploitati­on of the region.

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