Current:Home > FinanceOil and Gas Drilling on Federal Land Headed for Faster Approvals, Zinke Says -Zenith Money Vision
Oil and Gas Drilling on Federal Land Headed for Faster Approvals, Zinke Says
View
Date:2025-04-12 14:31:41
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke announced plans Thursday to speed up the application process for oil and natural gas drilling on federal lands so permits are approved within 30 days—a move that drew immediate fire from environmental groups, especially in the West.
“Secretary Zinke’s order offers a solution in search of a problem,” said Nada Culver, senior director of agency policy and planning for The Wilderness Society.
“The oil and gas industry has been sitting on thousands of approved permits on their millions of acres of leased land for years now. The real problem here is this administration’s obsession with selling out more of our public lands to the oil and gas industry at the expense of the American people,” Culver said.
Under the law, the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management has 30 days to grant or deny a permit—once all National Environmental Policy Act requirements are fulfilled. In 2016, Zinke said, the application process took an average of 257 days and the Obama administration cancelled or postponed 11 lease sales. Zinke intends to keep the entire process to under a month.
“This is just good government,” he said, referring to the order.
A 2016 Congressional Research Service report, widely cited by the oil and gas industry, points out that production of natural gas on private and state lands rose 55 percent from 2010 to 2015 and oil production rose more than 100 percent, while production on federal lands stayed flat or declined. Those numbers, the oil and gas industry says, suggest federal lands should contribute more to the energy mix and that Obama-era policies and processes cut drilling and gas extraction on those lands by making it slower and harder to gain access.
But that same report points out that while the permitting process is often faster on state and private land, a “private land versus federal land permitting regime does not lend itself to an ‘apples-to-apples’ comparison.”
The real driver behind the slowdown, environmental and land rights groups point, was oil prices, which fell during that same time period.
“The only people who think oil and gas companies don’t have enough public land to drill are oil and gas companies and the politicians they bought,” said Chris Saeger, executive director of the Montana-based Western Values Project, in a statement. “With historically low gas prices, these companies aren’t using millions of acres of leases they already have, so there’s no reason to hand over even more.”
Saeger’s group said that oil companies didn’t buy oil and gas leases that were offered on more than 22 million acres of federal land between 2008 and 2015, and the industry requested 7,000 fewer drilling permits between 2013 and 2015 than between 2007 and 2009.
The announcement Thursday comes after a series of other moves by the Trump administration intended to pave the way for oil and gas interests to gain access to public lands.
In April, President Donald Trump issued an executive order in which he aimed to open areas of the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans to drilling. In May, Zinke announced that his agency would open areas of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska to oil and gas leases.
veryGood! (983)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Great British Baking Show Reveals Matt Lucas' Replacement as Host
- EU law targets Big Tech over hate speech, disinformation
- How Rob Kardashian Is Balancing Fatherhood and Work Amid Great New Chapter
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Follow James Harden’s Hosting Guide to Score Major Points With Your Guests
- COMIC: How a computer scientist fights bias in algorithms
- Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen's It Takes Two Co-Star Reveals Major Easter Egg You Totally Missed
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Aaron Taylor-Johnson's Shirtless Calvin Klein Ad Will Make You Blush
Ranking
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Grubhub offered free lunches in New York City. That's when the chaos began
- The EU will require all cellphones to have the same type of charging port
- Elon Musk says he'll reverse Donald Trump Twitter ban
- Small twin
- She joined DHS to fight disinformation. She says she was halted by... disinformation
- A new app guides visitors through NYC's Chinatown with hidden stories
- Clashes erupt in France on May Day as hundreds of thousands protest Macron's pension reforms
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
This is the first image of the black hole at the heart of the Milky Way
Zach Shallcross Reveals the Bachelor: Women Tell All Moment That Threw Him a “Curveball”
BeReal is Gen Z's new favorite social media app. Here's how it works
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
The rocky road ahead for startups
Estonia hosts NATO-led cyber war games, with one eye on Russia
Deepfake video of Zelenskyy could be 'tip of the iceberg' in info war, experts warn