The Biden administration's first onshore oil and gas lease sale began yesterday with around 99,000 acres offered in Wyoming. Oil and gas companies declined to bid on over a third of the parcels offered yesterday, or around half of the acreage offered, indicating the industry is less interested in leasing federal land than it has previously claimed.
Meanwhile, a dozen environmental groups filed two separate lawsuits yesterday over the federal oil and gas lease sale currently underway.
The sale includes roughly 160 parcels spanning about 130,000 acres across the West and Oklahoma, with 90 percent of that acreage located in Wyoming. The Bureau of Land Management offered around 20 percent of the total acreage oil and gas companies requested be included in the sale.
One lawsuit, filed by Earthjustice on behalf of The Wilderness Society and Friends of the Earth, alleges the Wyoming lease sale violates the National Environmental Policy Act. The second lawsuit, filed by Western Environmental Law on behalf of ten other groups, alleges the entire lease sale violates the Federal Land Policy and Management Act.
The two-day lease sale continues today with around 30,000 acres to be offered in Wyoming and other states.
Monuments to America’s past
In recent decades, presidents have used the Antiquities Act to help shape our collective understanding of what counts as U.S. history, designating national monuments that tell the stories of women as well as Black, LGBTQ, Latino, and Indigenous people.
A new interactive storymap from the Center for Western Priorities puts this shift into context, with information about the history of the Antiquities Act and its evolution under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
The map also identifies four proposed national monuments that President Joe Biden could designate today in order to honor the history of people of color in the U.S.
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