The controversial oil drilling project on Alaska’s North Slope was approved on Monday by the Biden administration, defying criticism from environmentalists.
US energy company ConocoPhillips has been permitted by the Interior Department to drill for oil at three locations within the publicly held National Petroleum Reserve in pristine western Arctic Alaska.
Joseph Biden pledged not to authorize any new leases for oil and gas projects on federal lands during the 2020 presidential campaign, and his administration has recently come under heavy pressure from environmental organizations to reject the so-called Willow Project.
Legislators from Alaska and other project supporters fought hard to have the project approved, arguing that it would create thousands of jobs and increase American energy independence by producing 180,000 barrels of oil per day at its peak, or 576 million barrels over 30 years.
Environmental organizations disapproved of the Interior Department’s action.
Abigail Dillen, head of Earthjustice, stated, “We are too late in the climate crisis to authorize major oil and gas projects that directly undercut the new clean economy that the Biden administration vowed to advance.
Although President Biden is allowing a project that will undermine his own climate goals, we are aware that he recognizes the existential threat posed by climate change.
“The negative effects of President Biden’s decision cannot be exaggerated,” Sierra Club executive director Ben Jealous warned.”
However, willow will be one of the biggest oil and gas projects on federal public lands in the nation, and the carbon pollution it will spew into the air will have disastrous impacts on our communities, animals, and the planet, according to Jealous.
For many years to come, we will feel the effects of this. In the final months of the previous government, the Trump administration approved the Willow Project, but a judge stopped it for additional examination.
In a February environmental impact report, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) approved three drilling sites, rejected one, and postponed consideration of a fourth.
Biden has pushed for the development of renewable energy sources and referred to global warming as an existential concern.
Environmental organizations have warned that the oil extraction project will make the situation worse as temperatures in Alaska have been rising more quickly than in other parts of the world.
According to the Sierra Club, during the next 30 years, the Willow Project will emit more than 250 million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the environment, which is equal to the yearly emissions of 66 coal plants.
It has been referred to as a “carbon bomb” by Greenpeace. More than three million people signed a petition on Change.org to stop the project, while a #StopWillow campaign on TikTok received tens of millions of views.
To persuade Biden to support the project, Alaska’s two Republican senators and the state’s lone representative in the House, Mary Peltola, a native Alaskan, and a Democrat, met with him earlier this month.
Alaskans “aren’t ignorant to the implications of climate change,” according to Peltola, who wrote an opinion piece for The Hill, but the Willow Project can act as a bridge while the nation switches from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources.
In addition, we can lessen America’s reliance on foreign energy, which keeps everyone safer in a world that has become more unpredictable since Russia invaded Ukraine, according to Peltola.
Conclusion
To achieve a net emissions economy by no later than 2050, Biden has promised to slash greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 when compared to 2005 levels.
Source: PunchÂ