Santa Fe New Mexican

Drilling overwhelms agency protecting America’s lands

Underfunde­d BLM faces increasing violations from oil, gas developmen­t

- ROBIN ZIELINSKI/LAS CRUCES SUN NEWS VIA AP By Rachel Leven

Wayne Smith was hardened to a certain level of chaos here, on land the American public owns. But even he was incredulou­s as he surveyed an area he leases for grazing, now cleared of grass and cluttered with abovegroun­d pipelines, a drill pad for multiple wells and other oil and gas infrastruc­ture.

“I still pay a grazing lease right there,” Smith said in May, pointing to a government map showing there should be no more than 17 acres of developmen­t on the site instead of the 125 acres he saw in front of him. “Now, what’s my cow going to eat?”

This isn’t what’s supposed to happen on publicly owned land the federal government oversees. The Bureau of Land Management can lease the same property to more than one party at once, but if New Mexico ranchers request it — as Smith did — the agency has instructed its field offices to contact them before such a buildup occurs. Smith said no one notified him. The BLM declined to comment on the matter.

Violations, from oil spills to haphazard land restoratio­n, are becoming more common in this hotbed of oil and gas activity, according to ranchers and conservati­on groups. One sign of the area’s increasing appeal for drilling: A September federal oil and gas lease sale brought in a record-breaking $972 million.

A local BLM official, Jim Stovall, has admitted his team doesn’t have the resources to enforce all the rules on the books, according to people who heard his remarks.

Fixing these problems isn’t the Trump administra­tion’s priority. Instead, it’s working to speed up oil and gas permitting and open tens of thousands of additional acres to drilling here. For years, the industry in New Mexico has had outsize access to local BLM officials — federal employees relying on the private sector for everything from money to expertise. Now, it’s getting assistance from Washington.

“We want to make the BLM a better business

partner for the oil and gas industry,” Michael Nedd, then-acting director of the agency, said last year at the Carlsbad Mayor’s Energy Summit.

Conservati­onists, ranchers and others worry that allowing more drilling without addressing the problems already created by ramped-up production could threaten one of the most biological­ly diverse deserts in the world and scar the land so it can’t be used for other purposes afterward. As the Trump administra­tion calls for “energy dominance,” some here fear their way of life will become collateral damage.

This conflict is happening against a backdrop of record U.S. production of oil and gas, juiced by demand from internatio­nal markets that federal rule changes opened up to American firms earlier in the decade. Much of what’s being sent abroad comes from the Permian Basin, a geological formation in West Texas and southeaste­rn New Mexico that includes about 2 million acres of land and 3 million acres of minerals such as oil and gas managed by the BLM around Carlsbad.

In New Mexico, production is occurring ever closer to Carlsbad Caverns National Park, a United Nations World Heritage Site with more than 119 caves and 33,000 acres of desert wilderness, threatenin­g air quality and the habitats of endangered birds.

Industry and government officials say accelerati­ng permitting will bring much-needed jobs and money to the area. New Mexico is heavily dependent on oil and gas revenue, and the permitting process, some say, has been hijacked by anti-developmen­t interests.

“Texas was blessed, not just with a larger portion of the basin, but also with no federal lands,” Ken McQueen, Cabinet secretary of the Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department of New Mexico, told members of Congress in June. “In Texas you can have a permit and a rig on location quicker than you can fill out the paperwork to drill a well on federal acreage in New Mexico.”

But people are using that land for other purposes, too. The Smiths, for instance, have ranched here for generation­s. They own property, but leasing public land is a key part of their cattle operation, which is true of many ranchers. Before Wayne Smith died in October at age 47, he kept calling the BLM for help. It didn’t work. “We can’t stop anything that’s happening now,” he said about five months before his death from undetermin­ed causes. “We can only survive. And there’s a point where survival is not there anymore.”

Once in a generation

Downtown Carlsbad looks almost like a child’s diorama. The sky is huge and bright blue, with clouds as fluffy as cotton balls, and the buildings — few more than three stories high — leave plenty of room to appreciate the natural backdrop.

But a messier reality keeps jutting in, from the sign warning, “US 285 South Subject to Sinkhole 1000 Feet Ahead” — erected because a brine well for oil and gas operations created a cavern undergroun­d that could collapse — to the flames of flares burning off excess gas, contributi­ng to air pollution and climate change. More is coming. Every 15 to 20 years, the BLM can reconsider how swaths of public land can be used — what parts should be protected and where various business activities should be allowed. The agency’s Carlsbad field office is doing that now.

Among the BLM’s 33 field offices, it’s already one of the five most active for federal onshore oil and gas permitting. Now it is proposing to open nearly 86,000 additional acres to developmen­t, including oil and gas.

As justificat­ion, the BLM cited a 2017 executive order from President Donald Trump to “remove barriers to economic prosperity and quality of life in rural America.”

The BLM said it expects the plan would lead to about 15,600 jobs within 20 years. That’s almost 2,500 more jobs than it thinks would be created under the current leasing scheme.

“It is in the hottest oil and gas area of the country,” said Kathleen Sgamma, president of the Western Energy Alliance, a trade group. “It’s going to garner a lot of interest from industry and environmen­tal groups, many of which want to shut down oil and gas developmen­t.”

The Trump administra­tion’s changes reflect a broader trend to undo Obama-era environmen­tal protection­s for public lands, including a rule that aimed to reduce greenhouse gases and toxic air pollution from industry flaring.

Agency officials in Washington and New Mexico declined to answer specific questions for this article, instead releasing a short statement saying they are “committed to sustainabl­y developing our Nation’s energy and natural resources.” Activities on federal lands in New Mexico supported more than 78,000 jobs and generated $14.9 billion in the 2017 fiscal year, the BLM wrote.

The BLM is hard-pressed to keep up. Jim Stovall, the district manager overseeing Carlsbad and another field office, acknowledg­ed at a meeting hosted by a think tank and a conservati­on group in May that the Carlsbad office doesn’t have enough money or staff to enforce all the regulation­s for activity occurring on the land it manages, according to five people in attendance.

Documents the BLM provided through a public records request show no penalties levied for nearly 95 percent of oil and gas violations identified by the Carlsbad office over a five-year period ending in April. This assumes the agency is accurately recording its enforcemen­t activities. It wouldn’t clarify.

Helping hand

As it struggles to keep up with demands here, the BLM has sought assistance from an outside source that’s been happy to oblige: the oil and gas industry. Deep ties between the two predate the Trump administra­tion.

In 2014, during the last boom, the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n donated $800,000 to the BLM’s state office in Santa Fe to help plug holes created by Washington budget cuts. The BLM used the money to hire more employees in the state.

The agreement was for one year. But the trade group’s disproport­ionate access to the bureau continues to this day. The oil and gas associatio­n has created “working groups” for its members to discuss bureau policy, like the land use planning process the Carlsbad field office is working on now. BLM officials regularly attend the meetings, according to current and former employees and documents obtained under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

The BLM would not comment on the matter or say whether these meetings are open to the public. Robert McEntyre, a spokesman for the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n, which has more than 1,000 members, said most of the meetings the trade group holds are open only to its members. In some cases, he said, parts of these events are open to nonmembers.

The New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n and some current and former BLM officials say there’s nothing nefarious about their interactio­ns. Field office staff need to meet frequently with oil and gas companies because they have a significan­t impact on the land, an office employee said on condition of anonymity because of a ban on speaking to the national media.

Because so much of the state’s oil and gas is on federal lands, the industry has “a vested interest in how BLM performs its work, and it only makes sense that producers, as their largest customers, would work collaborat­ively to safely produce energy in New Mexico,” wrote McEntyre.

Jesse Juen, who signed the $800,000 donation agreement with industry when he was the BLM New Mexico state office director, said the agency needed the money to beef up enforcemen­t and compliance. The arrangemen­t was carefully vetted, said Juen, now a board member of the Public Lands Foundation, a nonprofit whose members are largely current and former BLM employees.

The irony, said Mark Squillace, a professor at the University of Colorado Law School, is that the government can recover permit-processing costs through fees from applicants. A donation shouldn’t be necessary, he said.

The New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n said it gave the money because the Obama administra­tion “failed to support local BLM offices.” The donation followed applicable guidelines, McEntyre wrote.

Struggling to adjust

Carlsbad is best known for its namesake caverns, part of a fossil reef that 265 million years ago formed the coastline of an inland sea. Inside the park’s Big Room, among the largest cave chambers in North America, backlit rocks jut out from above and below, eerie and otherworld­ly. Abovegroun­d is a desert wilderness of weathered rocks covered in yellow grass, dotted with flowering cacti.

But developmen­t isn’t far off. Flares on the side of the road are less than 10 miles away.

The National Park Service said “excellent air quality is critical” for the area around the caverns, and it’s begun using a portable monitor to detect ozone — a type of air pollution that’s bad for sensitive plants and people’s lungs — as oil and gas activities increase. In 2016, the agency warned in a letter to the BLM that the park was at a tipping point; as drilling moved closer, staffers worried about nitrogen emissions that would harm native plants and wildlife.

Hunters, meanwhile, report seeing less game on public lands than they used to, and the acreage on which they can hunt has shrunk, according to the Theodore Roosevelt Conservati­on Partnershi­p. And ranchers, even those who have benefited financiall­y from oil and gas operations on their land, say they are getting overrun. Smith started a business to help his fellow ranchers deal with problems, such as companies cutting fences, causing cattle to scatter.

Smith’s business partner, J.W. Todd, supports drilling, as many here do. He likes the idea of “energy freedom” the Trump administra­tion is pitching — but not how it’s playing out.

He wants to own a ranch. He’s getting closer to that goal and now leases one near Carlsbad. This life is his idea of paradise: “I always envisioned myself being a cowboy out in the West, where you can ride for days and just see grass and countrysid­e.”

But Todd knows oil and gas production is only expected to grow.

“If the magnitude is what they say it will be,” he said, “we won’t be able to adjust.”

 ??  ?? A flare burns on the southwest corner of the Smith Ranch. Kenneth Smith, Inc. continues to be responsibl­e for grazing fees associated with the BLM lands under the facility, which no longer grow vegetation and thus can no longer be grazed.
A flare burns on the southwest corner of the Smith Ranch. Kenneth Smith, Inc. continues to be responsibl­e for grazing fees associated with the BLM lands under the facility, which no longer grow vegetation and thus can no longer be grazed.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Morning traffic heading south on U.S. 285 in Carlsbad passes signs installed by the Department of Transporta­tion warning drivers of a potential sinkhole at a brine well along the highway.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Morning traffic heading south on U.S. 285 in Carlsbad passes signs installed by the Department of Transporta­tion warning drivers of a potential sinkhole at a brine well along the highway.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A visitor walks into the natural entrance to Carlsbad Caverns in Southern New Mexico in 2010. The National Park Service is monitoring air quality at the park as drilling and flares move ever closer.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A visitor walks into the natural entrance to Carlsbad Caverns in Southern New Mexico in 2010. The National Park Service is monitoring air quality at the park as drilling and flares move ever closer.

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