San Antonio Express-News

Biden moves forward with offshore drilling

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy and Jennifer Jacobs

The Biden administra­tion is charting plans to sell offshore oil drilling rights in the Gulf of Mexico over the next five years, despite objections from environmen­talists who argue the move would be disastrous for the climate.

The Interior Department ruled out adopting an offshore oil leasing plan that completely blocked auctions through late 2028, according to people familiar with the deliberati­ons who declined to be named because the measure is not yet public.

Oil industry advocates had pushed for a robust sale schedule to ensure steady developmen­t and production in the Gulf of Mexico, which provides roughly 15% of U.S. crude output today.

But environmen­talists argue new leasing isn’t compatible with the urgent need to decarboniz­e by mid-century and would lock in decades more of oil activity.

The release comes at a time of dwindling crude stockpiles and with oil futures approachin­g $100 a barrel. It would take years for any new leases to lead to explorator­y drilling, much less actual crude production.

A major factor in the administra­tion’s decision was an Inflation Reduction Act provision blocking the Interior Department from issuing new offshore wind leases unless in the prior year it had held an oil lease sale putting at least 60 million acres up for grabs. The requiremen­t developed by Sen. Joe Manchin, a Democrat from West Virginia, was seen tying the agency’s hands and forcing at least one oil auction to allow future sales of wind rights in the Gulf of Maine and off the Oregon coast.

White House and Interior Department spokespeop­le did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. But Deputy Secretary of the Interior

Tommy Beaudreau on Thursday told a Senate panel the five-year program “is definitely informed by the IRA and the connection the IRA makes between offshore oil and gas leasing and renewable energy leasing.”

The plan will be published on Friday, Beaudreau said. At that point, Congress would have 60 days to review the blueprint and advance legislatio­n making changes.

The schedule is a legally required precursor to leasing offshore waters for oil developmen­t; this one is set to govern potential sales through late 2028. While a different, future administra­tion could seek to alter course, the blueprint itself takes years to develop, defying quick pivots.

An earlier Biden proposal allowed as many as 11 auctions of offshore oil and gas leases — 10 in the Gulf of Mexico and one in Alaska’s Cook Inlet.

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