San Antonio Express-News

Suit challenges Trump on offshore drilling policy

- By Mark Thiessen

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — President Donald Trump exceeded his power when he signed an executive order reversing a ban on offshore drilling in vast parts of the Arctic Ocean and dozens of underwater canyons in the Atlantic Ocean, an attorney argued in federal court on Friday.

Erik Grafe, an Alaska-based attorney for the environmen­tal group Earthjusti­ce, said Trump acted without the authority of Congress or the Constituti­on when he reversed President Barack Obama’s drilling ban.

Grafe, the lead attorney in a lawsuit backed by nearly a dozen environmen­tal groups, contends the Outer Continenta­l Shelf Lands Act only allows presidents to remove lands under considerat­ion for developmen­t, not add them back in. Only Congress has that authority, he said.

“President Trump has attempted unilateral­ly to undo protection­s that President Obama put in place. And our argument is that that action is unlawful because he lacks constituti­onal authority and he lacks authority from Congress,” Grafe told reporters outside the courtroom in U.S. District Court in Anchorage.

Acting Assistant U.S. Attorney General Jeffrey Wood countered that Grafe and others were misinterpr­eting the intent of the law, written in 1953. He said it is meant to be flexible and sensible and not intended to bind one president with decisions made by the previous one when determinin­g offshore stewardshi­p as needs and realities change over time.

He said the plaintiffs were “simply wrong.” The U.S. Department of Justice declined to make Wood available for comment following the hearing.

In the government’s response to the lawsuit, it said only allowing presidents to take land out of considerat­ion for developmen­t “is one-way ratchet that broadly authorizes any one President to limit the national potential for leasing, exploratio­n, and developmen­t in the OCS for all time while simultaneo­usly tying the hands of that same President and all future presidents, even if those limits prove unwise or contrary to the critical national priorities that OCSLA advances, including energy developmen­t and national security.”

In 2015, Obama halted exploratio­n in coastal areas of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas and the Hanna Shoal, an important area for walrus.

In late December 2016, he withdrew most other potential Arctic Ocean lease areas — about 98 percent of the Arctic outer continenta­l shelf.

 ?? Mark Thiessen / Associated Press ?? Erik Grafe, center, an attorney for Earthjusti­ce, speaks to reporters Friday after a hearing in a lawsuit challengin­g President Trump’s reversal of the Arctic Ocean drilling ban.
Mark Thiessen / Associated Press Erik Grafe, center, an attorney for Earthjusti­ce, speaks to reporters Friday after a hearing in a lawsuit challengin­g President Trump’s reversal of the Arctic Ocean drilling ban.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States