Houston Chronicle

Critics filing suit to halt Trump’s Arctic oil drilling plan

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

Environmen­talists and Alaska natives are challengin­g the Trump administra­tion’s decision to sell drilling rights in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, arguing the government gave short shrift to the impact on polar bears and the region’s other wildlife.

The groups are filing a pair of lawsuits Monday in a U.S. district court in Alaska, according to a person familiar with the matter. The move sets up an election-year battle over the controvers­ial plan, even as the Interior Department prepares for a possible lease auction.

The challenger­s include environmen­tal groups and the Gwich’in

Steering Committee, an organizati­on representi­ng indigenous people in Alaska and Canada who subsist on the porcupine caribou herd that migrates through the refuge. The Gwich’in call the caribou calving grounds on the coastal plain “the sacred place where life begins.”

“The fight is not over,” the committee’s executive director, Bernadette Demientief­f, vowed last week after the Interior Department authorized an expansive oil leasing plan. “Our ways of life, our food security and our identity is not up for negotiatio­n.”

The groups argue the Interior Department glossed over the potential negative effects of oil developmen­t in the Arctic refuge’s 1.56million-acre coastal plain and didn’t sufficient­ly consider alternativ­es that would minimize the risks.

Congress in 2017 passed a law requiring two auctions of at least 400,000 acres worth of oil leases in the coastal plain before Dec. 22, 2024. But the Interior Department last week went further by authorizin­g leasing across the entire coastal plain. The agency rejected narrower alternativ­es that would make less acreage available, with more restrictio­ns on developmen­t.

The coastal plain is estimated to hold as much as 11.8 billion barrels of recoverabl­e crude, yet environmen­talists argue tapping that oil imperils one of the country’s last truly wild places and the Arctic foxes, polar bears, caribou and migratory birds that thrive in it.

 ?? U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Associated Press ?? Caribou migrate onto the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. Environmen­tal groups are suing to block a federal plan to open refuges for oil and gas drilling.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Associated Press Caribou migrate onto the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. Environmen­tal groups are suing to block a federal plan to open refuges for oil and gas drilling.

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