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Tag: Bureau of Land Management

  • By the #s: The wild areas one advocacy group says face most threats under Public Lands Rule repeal

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    CAPTION: The Valley of Fires in south-central New Mexico, pictured above in 2021, is one of the areas New Mexico Wild is most worried about due to the proposed rescission of the Bureau of Land Management’s Public Lands Rule. This area, like others NM Wild identified, has “wilderness characteristics” that might be ignored if conservation is de-emphasized relative to extraction under the proposed rule’s rescission. (Photo courtesy BLM)

    A prominent New Mexico environmental advocacy group has identified wild areas comprising more than 210 square miles across the state that will lose an important defense if a 2024 federal land use rule is rescinded.

    The Department of Interior late last week announced in the Federal Register that it would seek to undo the “Public Land Rule,” formally known as the Conservation and Landscape Health Rule, which Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said in a news release stands in the way of oil and gas development, along with other extractive uses of federal public land. 

    The Bureau of Land Management last April finalized the rule, which provided guidance for ensuring conservation of public lands received due consideration along with mining, timber, grazing, recreation or other uses. It also allowed the BLM to issue leases specifically for conservation, though none has been issued yet, said Sally Paez, a staff attorney for New Mexico Wild, in an interview Monday with Source New Mexico.

    She said the rule only reiterated and provided guidance for a 1976 law called the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, which provides the BLM with a framework for balancing multiple public land uses. The rule lets the agency protect “intact, functioning landscapes” along with emphasizing landscape health through the use of science, data and Indigenous knowledge.

    The rule being rescinded could have implications for all 13.5 million acres of BLM land in New Mexico, particularly those that are not currently designated for oil and gas extraction or other economic uses and those that don’t have existing wilderness protections, Paez said. 

    The nonprofit, with the help of a “citizen inventory” done by volunteers, has identified more than a dozen areas comprising 134,600 acres that her office said have “wilderness characteristics,” but no protections as such. Those characteristics include being bigger than 5,000 acres with “opportunities for solitude” or recreation. 

    Without the Public Lands Rule, New Mexico Wild won’t be able to argue that those areas across the state, which she said are popular with hikers and other recreators, should be protected. 

    “Those are really the areas that for us, I think, we’re most worried about because under the Public Land rule, we had an argument for those,” she said. “‘This is an intact landscape.’”

    The public can comment on the proposed rule rescission until Nov. 10. 

    In addition to the “citizen inventory” areas NM Wild identified, Paez pointed out a handful of other places popular with hikers on BLM lands that might benefit from the Public Lands Rule if it is allowed to stay on the books. Those areas include the Caja Del Rio near Santa Fe; San Lorenzo Canyon south of Albuquerque; Quebradas Mountains in Socorro; the Florida Mountains near Deming; and Montezuma Crest near Placitas. 

    And the Pecos River Watershed could benefit from the restoration leases enabled by the rule, she said, which could offset the impacts of intensive oil and gas extraction in the Permian Basis by restoring riparian and aquatic habitat.

    “That’s the type of project that I could definitely see being really good,” she said. 

    Paez said the BLM’s effort to rescind the Public Lands Rule is comparable to the Forest Service undoing the Roadless Rule, which nixes protections against timber harvesting in designated wild forest areas. Public comments for that proposal are being accepted through Friday. 

    “It’s all kind of this broad pattern of a policy shift towards short term gain and extraction and corporate interests, and out of public values and shared resources,” she said.

     

     

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  • Trump administration wants to cancel Biden-era rule that made conservation a ‘use’ of public land

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    By MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press

    BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Interior Secretary Doug Burgum on Wednesday proposed canceling a public land management rule that put conservation on equal footing with development, as President Donald Trump’s administration seeks to open more taxpayer-owned tracts to drilling, logging, mining and grazing.

    The rule was a key part of efforts under former President Joe Biden to refocus the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management, which oversees about 10% of land in the U.S. Adopted last year, it allowed public property to be leased for restoration in the same way that oil companies lease land for drilling.

    Industry and agriculture groups were bitterly opposed to the Biden rule and lobbied Republicans to reverse it. States including North Dakota, where Burgum served as governor before joining Trump’s Cabinet, pursued a lawsuit hoping to block the rule.

    Wednesday’s announcement comes amid a flurry of actions since Trump took office aimed at boosting energy production from the federal government’s vast land holdings, which are concentrated in Western states including Alaska, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming.

    Interior officials said the Biden rule had sidelined people who depend on public lands for their livelihoods and imposed unneeded restrictions.

    Burgum said in a statement that it would have prevented thousands of acres from being used for energy and mineral productions, grazing and recreation. Overturning it “protects our American way of life and gives our communities a voice in the land that they depend on,” Burgum said.

    “The previous administration’s Public Lands Rule had the potential to block access to hundreds of thousands of acres of multiple-use land – preventing energy and mineral production, timber management, grazing and recreation across the West,” Burgum said.

    FILE – Cattle graze along a section of the Missouri River that includes the Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument near Fort Benton, Mont., on Sept. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Matthew Brown, File)

    Environmentalists had largely embraced the rule that was finalized in April 2024. Supporters argued that conservation was a long-neglected facet of the land bureau’s mission under the 1976 Federal Lands Policy Management Act.

    “The administration cannot simply overthrow that statutory authority because they would prefer to let drilling and mining companies call the shots,” said Alison Flint, senior legal director at The Wilderness Society.

    While the bureau previously issued leases for conservation purposes in limited cases, it never had a dedicated program for it.

    Critics said the change under Biden violated the “multiple use” mandate for Interior Department lands, by catapulting the “non-use” of federal lands — meaning restoration leases — to a position of prominence.

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    Associated Press

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  • Federal judge temporarily blocks Biden administration rule to limit flaring of gas at oil wells

    Federal judge temporarily blocks Biden administration rule to limit flaring of gas at oil wells

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    BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A federal judge in North Dakota has temporarily blocked a new Biden administration rule aimed at reducing the venting and flaring of natural gas at oil wells.

    “At this preliminary stage, the plaintiffs have shown they are likely to succeed on the merits of their claim the 2024 Rule is arbitrary and capricious,” U.S. District Judge Daniel Traynor ruled Friday, the Bismarck Tribune reported.

    North Dakota, along with Montana, Texas, Wyoming and Utah, challenged the rule in federal court earlier this year, arguing that it would hinder oil and gas production and that the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management is overstepping its regulatory authority on non-federal minerals and air pollution.

    The bureau says the rule is intended to reduce the waste of gas and that royalty owners would see over $50 million in additional payments if it was enforced.

    But Traynor wrote that the rules “add nothing more than a layer of federal regulation on top of existing federal regulation.”

    When pumping for oil, natural gas often comes up as a byproduct. Gas isn’t as profitable as oil, so it is vented or flared unless the right equipment is in place to capture.

    Methane, the main component of natural gas, is a climate “super pollutant” that is many times more potent in the short term than carbon dioxide.

    Well operators have reduced flaring rates in North Dakota significantly over the past few years, but they still hover around 5%, the Tribune reported. Reductions require infrastructure to capture, transport and use that gas.

    North Dakota politicians praised the ruling.

    “The Biden-Harris administration continuously attempts to overregulate and ultimately debilitate North Dakota’s energy production capabilities,” state Attorney General Drew Wrigley said in a statement.

    The Bureau of Land Management declined comment.

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  • Wildfire Season Is Already One of Most Severe in History – KXL

    Wildfire Season Is Already One of Most Severe in History – KXL

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    PORTLAND, Ore. – More than 1. 3 million acres are burning in the Pacific Northwest, where there are 46 large, uncontained fires. Oregon U.S. Senator Ron Wyden asked firefighting experts, “We’re still a long way from the end of the fire season. It used to be we were able to contain fires because there were smaller, fires. You didn’t have so many fires simultaneously. What I’m worried about now is we’re gonna have fires all over the West simultaneously as we go into August.  And I’m curious what your thoughts are in terms of how serious that is.”

    Chief Travis Modema with the Oregon Department of State Fire Marshal answered, “Your intuition and your gut is spot on. A hundred percent, I think. This is 31 years all in Oregon in wildfire for myself. And we haven’t seen a fire season like this to date. That started this early and is going to have the longevity off this 2024 wildfire season.

    He says the challenges and the conditions are not going to get better, and that means firefighters and the country have to be prepared even before fire season starts.

    Shane DeForest, the Vale District Manager for the Bureau of Land Management, says it’s the prime time for wildfires.

    “For us out here in southeastern Oregon most intense portion of our season is just beginning. The month of August is always the time where we get the most number of fires, where we burn the most acres. And nationally, it’s also the same time where a lot of fires are going on all over the place.”

    But this year, he says, it’s much more severe.

    “Our 10 year average, we have quadrupled the number of acres burned in our BLM district.  There’s going to be some more fires, potentially some additional megafire type situations.”

     

     

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    Annette Newell

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