U.S. judge annuls Gulf of Mexico oil auction over climate impact
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[January 28, 2022]
By Valerie Volcovici and Nichola Groom
(Reuters) -A federal judge invalidated the
results of an oil and gas lease sale in the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday
saying the Biden administration failed to properly account for the
auction's climate change impact.
The decision has cast uncertainty over the future of the U.S. federal
offshore drilling program, which has been a big source of public revenue
for decades but also drawn the ire of activists concerned about its
impact on the environment and contribution to global warming.
The Gulf of Mexico accounts for 15% of existing U.S. oil production and
5% of dry natural gas output, according to the Energy Information
Administration.
In the decision, Judge Rudolph Contreras of the United States District
Court of the District of Columbia ruled to vacate the Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management's Lease Sale 257, which offered about 80 million
offshore acres (37.4 million hectares) in the Gulf of Mexico in an
auction last November.
The sale generated more than $190 million, the highest since 2019, on
1.7 million acres sold. It drew bids from U.S. oil majors including
Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp.
Thursday's decision came after the environmental group Earthjustice
challenged the sale on behalf of four other green groups, arguing U.S.
President Joe Biden's Interior Department was relying on a years-old
environmental analysis that did not accurately consider greenhouse gas
emissions that would result from development of the blocks.
Contreras agreed, faulting the administration for excluding foreign
consumption from its greenhouse gas emissions analysis and for ignoring
the latest science about the role of oil and gas development on global
warming.
The Interior Department, which oversees federal oil and gas development,
said it was reviewing the decision.
CAMPAIGN PLEDGE
Biden campaigned for the White House partially on a pledge to end
federal oil and gas drilling to fight climate change, but efforts to
suspend new auctions failed after Gulf Coast states sued.
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Unused oil rigs sit in the Gulf of Mexico near Port Fourchon,
Louisiana August 11, 2010. REUTERS/Lee Celano
"We have documented serious
deficiencies in the federal oil and gas program," Interior
spokesperson Melissa Schwartz said in a statement. "Especially in
the face of the climate crisis, we need to take the time to make
significant and long overdue programmatic reforms."
Congress has mandated that the United States hold regular auctions
of public lands for oil and gas development.
"We are pleased that the court invalidated Interior’s illegal lease
sale," said Brettny Hardy, Earthjustice’s senior attorney, in a
statement. "We simply cannot continue to make investments in the
fossil fuel industry to the peril of our communities and
increasingly warming planet."
It was unclear how the ruling would affect the administration's
plans to offer more than 300,000 acres of onshore leases to drillers
by the end of this quarter. Like the Gulf sale, those auctions were
initiated after a federal judge in June ordered the government to
resume oil and gas leasing.
The offshore drilling industry slammed the decision.
"Uncertainty around the future of the U.S. federal offshore leasing
program may only strengthen the geopolitical influence of higher
emitting - and adversarial - nations, such as Russia," National
Ocean Industries Association President Erik Milito said in reaction
to the ruling.
Scott Lauermann, a spokesman for oil industry lobby group the
American Petroleum Institute (API), said the API was "reviewing the
decision and "considering our options."
The decision is not the first time a court has cited faulty
environmental analyses in blocking oil and gas development on
federal lands. In August, a federal judge reversed the government's
approval of a $6 billion ConocoPhillips development in Alaska, a
decision that was cited in Contreras' ruling.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom and Valerie Volcovici; Editing by
Jacqueline Wong and Christian Schmollinger)
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