康菲石油公司就拜登在阿拉斯加的石油和天然气钻探禁令提起诉讼

Jennifer A. Dlouhy,彭博社 2024 年 7 月 6 日

(彭博社) — 康菲石油公司起诉拜登政府,要求阻止其在阿拉斯加近一半的国家石油储备区进行钻探的禁令,称该措施违反了强制在该地开发石油的联邦法律。

周五提起的诉讼针对的是内政部的一项规定,该规定明确禁止在 2300 万英亩储备区中的 1060 万英亩(430 万公顷)土地上进行石油租赁,同时限制在被指定为“特殊区域”的 1300 万英亩土地上进行未来石油开发。

此案将考验总统拜登限制联邦土地上石油开发的最大举措之一,气候活动人士呼吁该举措与全球变暖不相容。

持有该保护区租约的石油行业倡导者表示,土地管理局的规定非法扼杀了一个世纪前为海军划定的能源来源地的开发。

该法规将适用于该地区现有的租约,但不会改变这些合同的条款,也不会直接影响目前授权的活动,例如康菲石油公司的 6 亿桶 Willow 项目。

尽管如此,该规则可能会对在该保护区拥有租约的公司产生广泛影响。康菲石油公司在文件中表示,其阿拉斯加子公司在该州拥有 180 万英亩的州和联邦租约,其中包括截至 2023 年底的 100 万英亩净未开发土地。

康菲石油公司在阿拉斯加州联邦法院提起的诉讼中表示,国会在建立该储备时表示,该储备应该用于“快速生产石油以满足国家能源需求”。根据美国地质调查局 2017 年的评估,该储备估计含有 87 亿桶可采石油。

康菲石油公司表示,国会“显然没有授权土地管理局颁布全面的法规,阻止和防止整个国家自然保护区的石油生产”。然而,该规则包含“大量新条款,将资源保护置于能源生产之上,并有效地将石油储备变成事实上的荒野地区,完全禁止开发。”

该案与先前由北极伊皮亚特之声 (Voice of the Arctic Iñupiat) 提起的诉讼相似,该组织代表阿拉斯加北部社区、阿拉斯加州以及石油公司 North Slope Exploration LLC 和 North Slope Energy LLC,这两家公司共持有该保护区超过 552,000 英亩的租约。

该案是康菲石油公司诉内政部案,24-cv-00142,美国阿拉斯加地区地方法院。

原文链接/WorldOil

ConocoPhillips sues over Biden’s oil and gas drilling ban in Alaska

Jennifer A. Dlouhy, Bloomberg July 06, 2024

(Bloomberg) – ConocoPhillips sued to block a Biden administration ban on drilling across nearly half the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, claiming the measure violates a federal law that compels oil development there.

The lawsuit filed Friday takes aim at an Interior Department rule that explicitly bars oil leasing on 10.6 million acres (4.3 million hectares) of the 23-million-acre reserve, while restricting future oil development in 13 million acres designated as “special areas.”

The case will test one of President Joe Biden’s biggest moves to limit oil development on federal land, amid appeals by climate activists who claim it’s incompatible with a warming world.

Oil industry advocates that hold leases in the reserve say the Bureau of Land Management regulation unlawfully strangles development in territory set aside as a source of energy for the Navy a century ago.

The regulation will apply to existing leases within the area, though it won’t alter the terms of those contracts or directly affect currently authorized activities, such as ConocoPhillips’ 600 MMbbl Willow project.

Nonetheless, the rule could have wide effects for companies with leases in the reserve. ConocoPhillips’ Alaska unit holds 1.8 million acres of state and federal leases in the state, including 1 million net undeveloped acres as of year-end 2023, the company said in its filing.

In establishing the reserve, Congress said it should be used for “expeditious production of oil to meet the nation’s energy needs,” ConocoPhillips said in its lawsuit, filed in a federal court in Alaska. The reserve contains an estimated 8.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil, according to a 2017 assessment by the US Geological Survey.

Congress “plainly did not authorize BLM to promulgate sweeping regulations that thwart and prevent the production of petroleum throughout the NPR-A,” ConocoPhillips said. Yet, the rule contains “numerous new provisions that elevate resource preservation over energy production and effectively turn the petroleum reserve into a de facto wilderness area in which development is outright prohibited.”

The case joins earlier challenges filed by the Voice of the Arctic Iñupiat that represents North Alaska communities, the state of Alaska and oil companies North Slope Exploration LLC and North Slope Energy LLC, which together hold leases spanning more than 552,000 acres in the reserve.

The case is ConocoPhillips v. Department of Interior, 24-cv-00142, US District Court, District of Alaska.