OIL AND GAS
Trump seeks species protection rollbacks to promote US drilling
Trump seeks species protection rollbacks to promote US drilling
By Issam AHMED
Washington (AFP) Feb 4, 2025
US President Donald Trump's administration is moving to roll back protections for endangered species and their habitats in a bid to advance his "drill, baby, drill" energy agenda.

A directive signed late Monday by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum gives agencies 15 days to submit plans to unleash US energy, which critics say would weaken the Endangered Species Act and open up fragile landscapes from the Arctic to the Grand Canyon and even national monuments for exploitation.

"Today marks the beginning of an exciting chapter for the Department of the Interior," said Burgum, whose close ties to the fossil fuel industry drew sharp rebuke from environmentalists during his confirmation hearings.

"We are committed to working collaboratively to unlock America's full potential in energy dominance and economic development to make life more affordable for every American family while showing the world the power of America's natural resources and innovation."

The order aims to reverse bans on drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and offshore waters, sweeping restrictions imposed by former president Joe Biden.

It also seeks to rescind a rule that reinstated long-standing protections for birds against unintentional but preventable deaths caused by oil spills, mining pits, and building collisions.

Remarkably, it contains a directive to review safeguards for all national monuments -- a list of 138 historic landmarks that include sites such as Bears Ears in Utah, which was proclaimed by former president Barack Obama before Trump ordered its size to be reduced by 85 percent during his first term.

Environmental groups warn the move would accelerate the decline of animal and plant species.

- Birds and lizards threatened -

"Even as imperiled species dwindle and vanish across America, this order will fan the flames of the extinction crisis," said Noah Greenwald of the Center for Biological Diversity.

Taylor McKinnon, who oversees the Center's Southwest region, went further: "By making all national monuments available for review and possible termination, this order could be the most sweeping attack on public lands in the history of public lands."

Since its 1973 enactment, the Endangered Species Act has been credited with saving iconic species such as the gray wolf, bald eagle and grizzly bear from extinction.

But under Trump's first administration, key provisions were weakened -- allowing economic considerations to influence decisions on species protections. Biden later rolled back those changes, and now Trump is pushing to reinstate them.

Greenwald told AFP that species like the greater sage grouse, lesser prairie chicken, and sagebrush lizard -- whose habitats overlap with the Greater Permian Basin, the nation's top oil-producing and fracking site -- would be at heightened risk.

"Donald Trump made it clear on Day One what his priorities for public lands and waters would be, and these orders are the next step in his reckless 'drill, baby, drill' agenda," said Athan Manuel, director of the Sierra Club's Lands Protection Program.

Related Links
All About Oil and Gas News at OilGasDaily.com

Tweet

OIL AND GAS
Trump says oil and gas tariffs may come around Feb 18
Washington (AFP) Jan 31, 2025
US President Donald Trump said Friday that China, Canada and Mexico would not be able to forestall Washington's fresh tariffs due this weekend, adding that levies on oil and gas could come around mid-February. Trump has pledged to impose 25 percent tariffs on Canada and Mexico - and a 10 percent rate on China - on Saturday, pointing to the flow of deadly fentanyl into the United States, while flagging US trade deficits with all three countries. "Eventually we're going to put tariffs on chips, ... read more

OIL AND GAS
Climate activists defend 'future generations', appeal lawyer says

DeepSeek breakthrough raises AI energy questions

EU sends power generators to Ireland after Storm Eowyn

COP30 chief praises China's 'extraordinary' climate progress

OIL AND GAS
Research update: Generating electricity from tacky tape

Scientists Probe Declining Earbud Battery Longevity

DGIST Unveils Motion Powered System for Both Electricity and Light

More efficient batteries with quantum photonics

OIL AND GAS
New Study Enhances Trust in Wind Power Forecasting with Explainable AI

Trump casts chill over US wind energy sector

US falling behind on wind power, think tank warns

Flinders University advances vertical wind turbine design

OIL AND GAS
A look into the dark

Role of barrier films in maintaining the stability of perovskite solar cells

HZB sets new efficiency record for CIGS perovskite tandem solar cells

Low-carbon energy investment hit record $2.1 tn in 2024: report

OIL AND GAS
Aging reactors require a concrete solution

New Belgian government ditches nuclear power exit plan

GE Hitachi selects BWXT to manufacture reactor pressure vessel for BWRX-300

US utilities collaborate to accelerate GE Vernova's BWRX-300 deployment

OIL AND GAS
Zero Emissions Process for Truly Biodegradable Plastics Developed

New Green Phosphonate Chemistry Explored

Turning farm waste into sustainable roads

Chemical looping turns environmental waste into fuel

OIL AND GAS
Australian 'green' hydrogen project under threat

Trump seeks species protection rollbacks to promote US drilling

Trump says oil and gas tariffs may come around Feb 18

Norway's Equinor scales back renewable energy aims as profit falls

OIL AND GAS
UK prosecutors defend jail terms of environmental activists

Climate activists appeal long UK jail terms for 'peaceful protest'

UN confirms US demand to withdrawal from Paris climate deal

Billionaire Bloomberg to fund UN climate body after US withdrawal