Current:Home > MarketsSenate energy panel leaders from both parties press for Gulf oil lease sale to go on, despite ruling -Wealth Axis Pro
Senate energy panel leaders from both parties press for Gulf oil lease sale to go on, despite ruling
Indexbit View
Date:2025-04-09 03:40:38
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Democratic and Republican leaders of the U.S. Senate’s energy committee are pressing President Joe Biden’s administration to forge ahead with a sale of Gulf of Mexico oil and gas leases Nov. 8, even though a court order that it do so has been paused.
The lease sale, called for in 2022 climate legislation dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act, was announced earlier this year and was originally scheduled for Sept. 27. But the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management announced in August that it was scaling back the amount of acreage that oil companies would be allowed to bid on from 73 million acres (30 million hectares) to 67 million acres (27 million hectares). That followed a proposed legal settlement between the administration and environmentalists in a lawsuit over protections for an endangered whale species.
Oil companies and the state of Louisiana objected to the reduced acreage and filed suit. A federal judge in southwest Louisiana ordered the sale to go on at its original scale with the whale protections eliminated. That led to an appeal to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
In late September, a panel of that court refused to block the federal judge’s order but amended it to push the sale back to Nov. 8, so the administration would have more time to prepare. But on Thursday, a different panel stayed that order and set a hearing on the merits of the case for Nov. 13.
It remained unclear Friday whether BOEM would again delay the sale until after the Nov. 13 hearing, hold the sale of the full 73 million acres as originally planned or seek to hold the scaled-back sale. The notice of the Nov. 8 sale was still on the BOEM website Friday evening. An agency spokesman would only say that lawyers were reviewing Thursday’s ruling.
Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming, the ranking Republican on the energy committee, said the Nov. 8 sale should go on. “There is no reason to consider more last-minute changes and unnecessary delays,” Barrasso said in a statement Friday.
That followed a Thursday night statement from the committee chairman, Democratic West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a key player in the passage of the climate bill but a frequent critic of the Biden administration’s energy policies. Manchin called the Biden administration’s handling of the lease sale “a complete mess.” He said the sale should go on even if the government has to withdraw from the whale protection settlement.
veryGood! (2139)
Related
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Bill Hader Confirms Romance With Ali Wong After Months of Speculation
- A skinny robot documents the forces eroding a massive Antarctic glacier
- COP-out: who's liable for climate change destruction?
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Love Is Blind’s Marshall Glaze Reveals He’s Related to Bachelorette’s Justin Glaze
- Al Gore helped launch a global emissions tracker that keeps big polluters honest
- Survivor’s Keith Nale Dead at 62 After Cancer Battle
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Threats to water and biodiversity are linked. A new U.S. envoy role tackles them both
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Solar energy could be key in Puerto Rico's transition to 100% renewables, study says
- Greta Thunberg's 'The Climate Book' urges world to keep climate justice out front
- Italian rescuers search for missing in island landslide, with one confirmed dead
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- New England and upstate New York brace for a winter storm
- Lift Your Face in Just 5 Minutes and Save $221 on the NuFace Toning Device
- A proposed lithium mine presents a climate versus environment conflict
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Here’s What Joe Alwyn Has Been Up to Amid Taylor Swift Breakup
EPA seeks to mandate more use of ethanol and other biofuels
Scarlett Johansson Makes Rare Comment About Ex-Husband Ryan Reynolds
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Investors have trillions to fight climate change. Developing nations get little of it
Proof Jessica Biel’s Stylish Throwback Photos Are Tearin’ Up Justin Timberlake’s Heart
1,600 bats fell to the ground during Houston's cold snap. Here's how they were saved