Biden administration to approve major oil project in Alaska -source
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[March 13, 2023]
By Nichola Groom and Maria Caspani
(Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's administration will approve a
major and controversial oil drilling project in Alaska on Monday,
according to a source familiar with the matter.
The decision to move ahead with the project by authorizing three drill
sites in northwestern Alaska would come a day after Biden announced
sweeping curbs on oil and gas leasing to protect up to 16 million acres
of water and land in the region.
The Willow project, led by energy giant ConocoPhillips, would be located
inside the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, a 23 million-acre (93
million-hectare) area on the state's North Slope that is the largest
tract of undisturbed public land in the United States.
The project, announced in January 2017, is expected to produce about 600
million barrels of oil equivalent over its life, peaking at 180,000
barrels of oil per day, ConocoPhillips says on its website.
Earlier on Sunday, the U.S. Interior Department unveiled actions to make
nearly 3 million acres of the Beaufort Sea in the Arctic Ocean
"indefinitely off limits" for oil and gas leasing, building on an
Obama-era ban and effectively closing off U.S. Arctic waters to oil
exploration.
In addition to the drilling ban, the government will put forward new
protections for more than 13 million acres of "ecologically senitive"
Special Areas within Alaska's petroleum reserve, the administration said
in a statement on Sunday.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks during a
meeting with President of the European Commission Ursula von der
Leyen in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C.,
U.S., March 10, 2023. REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger
The area includes the Teshekpuk Lake, Utukok Uplands, Colville
River, Kasegaluk Lagoon and Peard Bay Special Areas.
The new moves come as Biden tries to balance his goals of
decarbonizing the U.S. economy and preserving pristine wilderness
with calls to increase domestic fuel supply to keep prices low.
Willow has support from the oil and gas industry and state officials
eager for jobs, but is fiercely opposed by environmental groups who
want to move rapidly away from fossil fuels to combat climate
change.
An environmental group said the new protections announced on Sunday
did not go far enough and the government should stop oil and gas
developments to help fight climate change.
"Protecting one area of the Arctic so you can destroy another
doesn't make sense, and it won't help the people and wildlife who
will be upended by the Willow project," said Kristen Monsell, a
senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom in Los Angeles and Maria Caspani in New
York; additional reporting by Akriti Sharma and Jose Joseph in
Bengaluru; Writing by Maria Caspani; editing by Stephen Coates and
Sonali Paul)
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