A U.S. appeals court on Aug. 17 vacated a lower court’s decision to block the Biden administration’s pause on new oil and gas leasing on federal land and waters—a key piece of the president's climate change strategy - and sent the case back to that court for further proceedings.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the Louisiana district court decision to block the Interior Department’s leasing pause after Louisiana and a dozen states sued the administration established arguing that they would suffer injury from the policy.
The court said the district court’s order and accompanying memorandum “lack specificity” and said its injunction focused on an Interior Department action that was not yet finalized.
President Joe Biden had paused the government’s new leases in January 2021 as part of a sweeping plan to rein in fossil-fuel extraction on federal land and combat the effects of climate change.
The Interior Department last year said it would proceed with new leases during the appeals process “consistent with the district court’s injunction during the appeal.”
It is currently reviewing the decision, Interior spokesperson Melissa Schwartz said.
Recommended Reading
How Diversified Already Surpassed its 2030 Emissions Goals
2024-04-12 - Through Diversified Energy’s “aggressive” voluntary leak detection and repair program, the company has already hit its 2030 emission goal and is en route to 2040 targets, the company says.
BKV CEO Chris Kalnin says ‘Forgotten’ Barnett Ripe for Refracs
2024-04-02 - The Barnett Shale is “ripe for fracs” and offers opportunities to boost natural gas production to historic levels, BKV Corp. CEO and Founder Chris Kalnin said at the DUG GAS+ Conference and Expo.