National Post

Greens pan Biden on new Alaska oil drilling

- Kanishka singh

Environmen­tal groups have condemned the Biden administra­tion’s defence of a proposed Conocophil­lips oil developmen­t in Alaska, a drilling project approved under former president Donald Trump.

Climate activists had previously said they were encouraged that upon taking office in January, President Joe Biden signed an order to rejoin the Paris Accord and revoked federal permits for the Keystone XL oil pipeline. Both issues were priorities for environmen­tal activists.

However, the administra­tion’s backing of the Alaska oil drilling project on Wednesday brought scathing criticism from environmen­tal groups.

“It is a serious misstep to pass on administra­tive authority to constrain an outof-control oil industry while simultaneo­usly punting to a deadlocked Congress for climate action,” said John Noel, a senior climate campaigner with Greenpeace USA.

In February, an appeals court blocked constructi­on of Conocophil­lips’ Us$2-billion-plus Willow crude oil project in Alaska. Wednesday’s backing of the project by the Biden administra­tion in a court filing comes after Interior Secretary Deb Haaland had opposed the project last year when she was a member of Congress.

The project has been pushed by Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican, who along with another Republican senator, Dan Sullivan, discussed the project with Biden on Monday, according to Politico.

“They are opening up a lane for the oil and gas industry to cause irreparabl­e harm to Arctic communitie­s’ public health and wildlife habitats,” Gregory Stewart, legal chair of the executive committee of the Alaska chapter of the Sierra Club, told Reuters in an email.

Earthjusti­ce said the drilling project is at odds with Biden’s historic climate leadership while the Alaska Wilderness League said the decision ignored the concerns of Indigenous communitie­s and was “incredibly disappoint­ing.”

Biden had united a range of environmen­tal groups behind his presidenti­al campaign, with the groups pouring money and effort into his run for president.

Environmen­tal political action committees, including the League of Conservati­on Voters, the Sierra Club, EDF Action and the Sunrise PAC, spent more than US$1.5 million in the 2020 federal election cycle — mostly for Biden and other Democrats.

The Trump administra­tion approved the Willow developmen­t plan in October. Permits to mine for gravel and build roads were issued on the morning of Jan. 20, just before Biden was sworn in as the 46th president.

Environmen­tal groups had sued late last year, making the argument that the government failed to take into account the impact that drilling would have on fragile wildlife.

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