拜登政府在康菲石油公司“低迷”石油项目批准之际限制北极石油租赁

Jennifer A. Dlouhy,彭博社 2023 年 3 月 13 日

(彭博社)“总统乔·拜登正在限制北极水域和阿拉斯加敏感地区的石油租赁,并采取措施扩大保护范围,同时他的政府准备批准康菲石油公司在该地区的大型石油开发项目

拜登正在扩大奥巴马时代对美国北极水域新石油和天然气租赁的禁令,并将制定新规则,禁止在阿拉斯加国家石油储备区的大部分地区出售新的石油钻探权,康菲石油公司在该地区拥有 6 亿桶 Willow 石油开采权。内政部在一份新闻稿中表示,该合资企业正在计划中。

环保主义者一直恳求政府采取进一步行动,拒绝康菲石油项目,并援引国际能源署的警告称,世界必须放弃开发新的油气田,以避免全球变暖的最严重后果,并在 2050 年之前转向净零排放。

拜登的高级顾问已经签署了威洛的批准,这对拜登来说是迄今为止最重要的环境决定之一,他在竞选时承诺放弃化石燃料。他还颁布了《减少通货膨胀法案》,这是一项全面的气候法,投入超过 3600 亿美元用于清洁能源和先进制造业。

针对阿拉斯加国家石油储备区的新限制可能会阻碍该地区未来超过 1300 万英亩的石油和天然气租赁,该地区占地 2300 万英亩,大约相当于印第安纳州的面积。

大约一个世纪前,NPR-A 被预留用于满足石油供应需求,自 1999 年以来,康菲石油公司一直持有与其价值 80 亿美元的 Willow 开发项目相关的租约。拜登政府认为,这限制了其停止或大幅削减 Willow 项目的选择。官员表示。

然而,这位官员补充说,政府将新的保护举措视为未来北极大部分地区租赁和扩大石油开发的防火墙。 

海上开发限制是根据一项曾经默默无闻的 1953 年法律实施的,它是建立在前总统巴拉克·奥巴马 (Barack Obama) 2016 年决定阻止美国大部分北极水域新的石油和天然气租赁的基础上的。拜登将扩大禁令范围,有效阻止未来阿拉斯加北部波弗特海剩余 280 万英亩的石油和天然气租赁。

内政部在一份新闻稿中表示,海上租赁的撤销“为 Teshekpuk 湖提供了额外的保护,防止未来波弗特海石油和天然气开发可能在 NPR-A 中建设陆上管道基础设施”。

前总统唐纳德·特朗普援引了拜登现在所采用的 1953 年法律,排除在 2032 年中期之前在佛罗里达州、佐治亚州和卡罗来纳州附近海域进行石油租赁的可能性。

内政部将这些行动视为拜登在获得“对气候适应力和环境正义的创纪录投资”并“减少美国的依赖”之后实现“美国历史上最激进的气候议程”的工作的一部分关于石油。”

环保人士对新的保护措施表示欢迎,但表示这些措施并没有弥补柳树石油项目可能获得批准的影响。

虽然原油需要数年时间才能流通,但康菲石油公司最终预计 Willow 的日产量为 180,000 桶,约占美国当前石油产量的 1.6%。

支持者表示,石油生产将在比其可以替代的其他原油供应更严格的环境保护下进行,有助于提高美国的能源安全,同时为阿拉斯加北坡提供经济生命线。

原文链接/worldoil

Biden administration to limit oil leasing in Arctic amidst ConocoPhillips’ “Willow” oil project approval

Jennifer A. Dlouhy, Bloomberg March 13, 2023

(Bloomberg) — President Joe Biden is limiting oil leasing in Arctic waters and sensitive areas of Alaska, taking steps to expand conservation as his administration prepares to approve a mammoth ConocoPhillips oil development in the region.

Biden is expanding an Obama-era ban on new oil and gas leasing in U.S. Arctic waters and will write new rules barring the sale of new oil drilling rights across much of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, where ConocoPhillips’s 600 million-barrel Willow venture is planned, the Interior Department said in a news release.

Environmentalists have been imploring the administration to go further and reject the ConocoPhillips oil project, citing International Energy Agency warnings that the world must forsake developing new oil and gas fields to avoid the worst consequences of global warming and shift to net zero emissions by 2050.

Senior Biden advisers have signed off on the Willow approval — one of the most significant environmental decisions yet for Biden, who campaigned on promises to shift away from fossil fuels. He also enacted the Inflation Reduction Act, a sweeping climate law that dedicates more than $360 billion to clean energy and advanced manufacturing.

New restrictions intended for the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska could thwart future oil and gas leasing across more than 13 million acres in the 23 million-acre site, which is roughly the size of Indiana.

The NPR-A was set aside for oil supply needs roughly a century ago and ConocoPhillips has held leases tied to its $8 billion Willow development since 1999. The Biden administration viewed that as limiting its options to stop or significantly curtail the Willow project, an administration official said.

Yet new conservation moves are seen by the administration as a firewall against future leasing and expanded oil development across much of the Arctic, the official added. 

The offshore development limits, imposed under a once-obscure 1953 law, build on former President Barack Obama’s 2016 decision to block new oil and gas leasing across most U.S. Arctic waters. Biden will expand the ban by effectively preventing future oil and gas leasing across the remaining 2.8 million acres of the Beaufort Sea north of Alaska.

The offshore leasing withdrawal “provides additional protections for Teshekpuk Lake, guarding against the potential that future Beaufort Sea oil and gas developments would seek to build onshore pipeline infrastructure into the NPR-A,” the Interior Department said in a news release.

Former President Donald Trump invoked the same 1953 law Biden is wielding now to rule out oil leasing in waters near Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas through mid-2032.

The Interior Department cast the actions as part of Biden’s work delivering “on the most aggressive climate agenda in American history,” after securing “record investments in climate resilience and environmental justice” and “reducing America’s reliance on oil.”

Environmentalists hailed the new conservation measures, but said they do nothing to make up for a potential approval of the Willow oil project.

While it would take years for crude to flow, ConocoPhillips eventually expects Willow to produce 180,000 bopd, or roughly 1.6% of current U.S. oil production.

Supporters have said that oil would be produced under stronger environmental protections than other crude supplies it could replace, helping boost U.S. energy security while providing an economic lifeline to Alaska’s North Slope.