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U.S. President Joe Bidenâs administration on Tuesday said it would suspend oil and gas leases that were handed out in an Alaska wildlife refuge during the final days of the Trump administration pending an environmental review.
The action reverses one of former president Donald Trumpâs signature efforts to expand fossil fuel development in the United States and delivers a setback to the Alaskan state government, which had hoped opening the enormous refuge would help revive its declining oil industry.
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Try refreshing your browser, or Biden suspends one of Trumpâs final acts â oil and gas leases in Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Back to video
Updated:
June 02, 2021 07:28 IST
Trump’s Interior Department had sold the leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in January over the objections of environmentalists and indigenous groups.
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Activists attend a protest against the legislation that would open Wilderness in Alaska to oil drilling on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S. File photo.
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Reuters
Trump’s Interior Department had sold the leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in January over the objections of environmentalists and indigenous groups.
The action reverses one of former President Donald Trump’s signature efforts to expand fossil fuel development in the United States, and delivers a setback to the Alaskan state government which had hoped opening the enormous refuge would help revive its declining oil industry.
Chair Grijalva praises Biden Administrationâs suspension of unjustified, potentially illegal oil and gas leases in Arctic Refuge The push to drill became a scam
Author:
News Release Democrats on the House Natural Resources Committee
Chair Raúl M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.) today praised the Biden administration’s decision to suspend the oil and gas leases issued in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge), which was opened to drilling by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. The news was first reported by Politico yesterday afternoon.
The Trump administration sold and issued the leases on a needlessly rapid schedule, without adequate review of public input or environmental impacts, and those leases are now being challenged in court through multiple lawsuits. Plaintiffs include numerous environmental organizations; a coalition of 15 states alleging violations of multiple federal laws; and the Gwich’in Steering Committee, an Indigenous-led organization dedicated to preserv