法律挑战可能会推迟阿拉斯加的柳树油项目

环保组织正在仔细审查拜登内政部批准康菲石油公司 Willow 项目的缺陷,这些缺陷可能为他们提起新的诉讼提供依据。

克拉克·明多克和蒂莫西·加德纳,路透社

3 月 13 日,石油行业对美国政府批准康菲石油公司在阿拉斯加北极地区价值数十亿美元的石油钻探项目欢呼雀跃,但法院的挑战可能会导致该计划进一步推迟。

乔·拜登总统的政府批准了耗资 70 亿美元的 Willow 项目的精简版,该项目位于阿拉斯加北海岸原始地区的联邦土地上。由于俄罗斯在乌克兰的战争引发了人们对全球能源安全的担忧,拜登一直在努力平衡其到 2050 年实现美国经济脱碳的目标。

康菲石油公司自 1999 年以来一直持有阿拉斯加国家石油储备区的租约。前总统唐纳德·特朗普政府于 2020 年批准了该项目。但一年后阿拉斯加地方法院法官莎伦·格里森以环境影响分析存在缺陷为由阻止了该项目。

现在,环保组织正在仔细审查拜登内政部的批准是否存在缺陷,这些缺陷可能为他们提起新的诉讼提供依据。

阿拉斯加受托人的高级专职律师布里奇特·普萨里亚诺斯 (Bridget Psarianos) 表示:“我们对这一决定是否真正符合法院 2021 年 8 月的命令存在一些严重疑问。” “我们将密切关注(内政部)土地管理局(BLM)如何考虑替代方案以及其最终批准情况。”

格里森法官裁定,特朗普的内政部未能纳入对外国消费威洛石油所产生的温室气体排放的预测,也未能分析该项目的替代方案。

普萨里亚诺斯说,阿拉斯加的受托人还在分析最新的批准是否符合《国家环境保护法》、《濒危物种法》和《1976 年海军石油储备生产法》等联邦法规。

参与之前诉讼的另一个组织生物多样性中心的高级律师克里斯汀·蒙塞尔表示,周一对 Willow 项目的批准“在许多方面仍然不够”。

蒙塞尔表示,尽管限制了井场数量,但该批准将使康菲石油公司能够开发其最初目标的 90% 以上的石油,而且政府未能解释这如何与气候变化目标相一致。

她表示,该分析没有充分解决石油和天然气开发的累积影响,包括燃烧化石燃料产生的温室气体排放将如何影响北极熊和海豹等受威胁或濒危动物的生存。

蒙塞尔说:“这对这些物种来说是雪上加霜,这些物种将因石油泄漏、栖息地破坏和噪音污染而受到该项目的直接伤害。”

内政部表示不予置评。

阿拉斯加州共和党参议员丹·沙利文告诉记者,该州立法者准备为这一决定辩护,以应对“无聊的”法律挑战。

沙利文说:“我们将通过与阿拉斯加利益相关者密切合作来实现这一目标,正是他们使我们走到了这一步。” 他说:“我们已经在为任何反对这一决定的诉讼准备一份法庭之友陈述。”

环境律师事务所地球正义 (Earthjustice) 的埃里克·格拉夫 (Erik Grafe) 称诉讼“很有可能”,并表示“内政部似乎没有修复地球正义和其他人在做出决定之前为该机构指出的无数法律缺陷”。

左倾的美国进步中心公共土地主管 Jenny Rowland-Shea 表示,另一个令人担忧的问题是康菲石油公司附近的 Alpine 油田去年发生了 7.2 MMcf 的天然气泄漏事件,迫使该油田 400 名工人中的 300 人被迫撤离。撤离。当地监管机构仍在评估其原因。

罗兰说,国土资源管理局的环境影响声明淡化了 Willow 发生此类泄漏的风险,但律师可以证明内政部的决定记录没有充分考虑这个问题。

康菲公司发言人丹尼斯·努斯表示,该公司不会对另一项法律挑战感到惊讶,但相信美国机构“已经进行了满足所有法律要求的彻底程序”。

钻井仍然经济吗?

旧金山加州大学法学院教授、前总统比尔·克林顿领导下的前内政部律师约翰·莱斯希表示,内政部在批准这些项目时没有太多选择。如果内政部没有批准 Willow,那么康菲石油公司可能会起诉该机构,称其租赁权已被剥夺。

莱希说,如果法院在潜在的诉讼中站在环保组织一边,可能只会拖延威洛的进程。

但科罗拉多大学法学院教授、前内政部律师马克·斯奎拉斯表示,该项目还存在其他威胁,包括随着电动汽车推动能源转型,石油价格可能下降,这可能会威胁 Willow 的长期生存能力。

“该项目更大的风险是经济风险,”他说。

原文链接/hartenergy

Legal Challenges Could Delay Alaska's Willow Oil Project

Environmental groups are combing through the Biden Interior Department's approval of ConocoPhillips' Willow project for flaws that could provide them grounds for new lawsuits.

Clark Mindock and Timothy Gardner, Reuters

The oil industry on March 13 cheered the U.S. government's greenlighting of ConocoPhillips' multibillion-dollar oil drilling project in Alaska's Arctic, but court challenges could mire the plans in further delays.

President Joe Biden's administration approved a trimmed-down version of the $7 billion Willow project on federal lands in a pristine area on Alaska's north coast. Biden has been trying to balance his goal of decarbonizing the U.S. economy by 2050 as Russia's war in Ukraine raises worries about global energy security.

ConocoPhillips has held the leases in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska since 1999. Former President Donald Trump's administration approved the project in 2020. But Alaska District Court Judge Sharon Gleason blocked it a year later arguing its environmental impact analysis was flawed.

Now environmental groups are combing through the Biden Interior Department's approval for flaws that could provide them grounds for new lawsuits.

"We have some serious questions about whether this decision actually complies with the court's order from August 2021," said Bridget Psarianos, senior staff attorney at Trustees for Alaska. "We'll be looking closely at how (Interior's) Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is considering alternatives and what its final approvals are."

Judge Gleason had ruled that Trump's Interior Department failed to include projections for greenhouse gas emissions from foreign consumption of Willow's oil and also failed to analyze alternatives to the project.

Trustees for Alaska is also analyzing whether the latest approval complied with federal statutes like the National Environmental Protection Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the 1976 Naval Petroleum Reserves Production Act, Psarianos said.

Kristen Monsell, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, another group involved in the previous suits, said Monday's approval for the Willow project is "still inadequate in numerous respects."

The approval would allow Conoco to develop more than 90% of the oil it had originally aimed for despite limiting the number of well pads, and the administration failed to explain how this was consistent with climate change goals, Monsell said.

She said the analysis did not adequately address cumulative impacts of the oil and gas development, including how greenhouse gas emissions from burning the fossil fuels would impact survival of threatened or endangered animals like polar bears and seals.

"That just adds insult to injury for these species that will be directly harmed by the project through oil spills, habitat destruction, and noise pollution," Monsell said.

Interior said it had no comment.

Senator Dan Sullivan, a Republican from Alaska, told reporters the state's lawmakers are prepared to defend the decision against "frivolous" legal challenges.

"We will do so by working closely with the same Alaska stakeholders who brought us this far," Sullivan said. "We are already prepping an amicus brief for any litigation that will come against this decision," he said.

Erik Grafe of Earthjustice, an environmental law firm, called litigation "very likely" and said it "does not look like Interior has fixed the myriad legal flaws that Earthjustice and others identified for the agency prior to its decision".

Jenny Rowland-Shea, the director for public lands at the left-leaning Center for American Progress, said another concern was a leak last year of 7.2 MMcf of natural gas at ConocoPhillip's nearby Alpine oil field, which forced 300 of the 400 workers there to evacuate. Local regulators are still assessing its causes.

The BLM's environmental impact statement downplayed the risks of such a leak at Willow, but lawyers could make a case that Interior's record of decision did not adequately consider the issue, Rowland said.

Dennis Nuss, a Conoco spokesperson, said the company would not be surprised by another legal challenge but believes U.S. agencies "have conducted a thorough process that satisfies all legal requirements".

Will drilling still be economical?

John Leshy, professor at U.C. College of the Law, San Francisco and a former Interior Department solicitor under former President Bill Clinton, suggested the department did not have much choice in approving the projects. If Interior had not approved Willow then ConocoPhillips would likely have sued the agency saying its lease rights had been taken.

And if the courts side with environmental groups on potential lawsuits it would probably only delay Willow, Leshy said.

But Mark Squillace, a professor at the University of Colorado Law School and former Interior Department lawyer said there were other threats to the project, including potential declining prices for oil as electric vehicles drive the energy transition which could threaten Willow's long-term viability.

"The bigger risk to the project is economic," he said.