The Trump administration released a resource management plan today that would expand federal fossil fuel development across a huge swath of southwestern Colorado, threatening a growing organic agriculture hub and undermining the state’s new climate law. The federal administration’s plans directly contradict Colorado’s new law calling for steep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, a 50 percent cut by 2030 and a 90 percent reduction by 2050.
“We cannot afford federal decision-making that continues to ignore climate science,” said Kyle Tisdel, attorney and energy program director with the Western Environmental Law Center. “Sustained exploitation of oil and gas is incompatible with a livable planet while also impeding the progress of communities like the North Fork Valley that thrive from a sustainable relationship to our public lands.”
“We will not let this terrible plan for our region stand,” said Natasha Léger, executive director of Citizens for a Healthy Community. “After 43,000 no-leasing comments, a decade of local opposition, and pushback by the courts on Trump’s ‘energy dominance’ agenda, it is truly unconscionable that the BLM thinks it appropriate to now open this rare and irreplaceable ecosystem to destruction by the oil and gas industry.”
The resource management plan for the Bureau of Land Management’s Uncompahgre Field Office would result in more than a half a billion tons of new climate pollution over the next 20 years. It follows a similar draft plan released last week by the Trump administration for eastern Colorado that would triple annual greenhouse gas pollution from oil and gas development by 2037. These plans will dictate public lands management in Colorado for decades.
“This plan is a disaster for southwestern Colorado and defies the state’s attempts to rein in climate pollution,” said Taylor McKinnon, a senior campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Nearly a quarter of U.S. greenhouse gas pollution comes from fossil-fuel extraction on public lands. Ending new oil and gas leasing on public lands is critical to confronting climate change. You can’t solve a problem by making it worse.”
The BLM chose a new plan for the Uncompahgre area that had not previously been released, subverting public notice and comment requirements required under federal law. Despite community concerns about harm to agriculture and recreation, the BLM refused to analyze any alternative that would significantly curb fossil fuel development and rejected a call to prohibit new oil, gas and coal leases.
“While local leaders are actively working to protect our climate and environment, the Trump administration is making a concentrated effort to roll back these safeguards,” said Nathaniel Shoaff, senior attorney at the Sierra Club. “We cannot let the current administration overhaul community concerns and state laws to the detriment of us all.”
The Uncompahgre plan covers about 675,000 acres of public land and almost a million acres of federal minerals in southwestern Colorado. The region includes the North Fork Valley and Telluride, areas that support exceptional outdoor recreation and Colorado’s largest concentration of organic agriculture. The area also includes numerous threatened and endangered species, including Colorado pikeminnows, razorback suckers, greenback cutthroat trout and Gunnison sage grouse.
“The plan is a slap in the face to Colorado’s commitment to reduce climate pollution and the reality of the climate crisis,” said Rebecca Fischer, climate and energy program attorney with WildEarth Guardians. “We’ll see if it stands up in court.”
The BLM claims it was unable to measure “the significance of impacts related to greenhouse gas emissions” and argued that stopping new leases in this single plan wouldn’t stop climate change resource impacts from warming, like drought and wildfires. Yet the agency is currently updating 10 resource management plans, including those governing the nation’s largest source of climate pollution from federal coal production in the Powder River Basin.
Contacts:
Kyle Tisdel, Western Environmental Law Center, (575) 613-8050, gro.w1732231993alnre1732231993tsew@1732231993ledsi1732231993t1732231993
Natasha Léger, Citizens for a Healthy Community, (970) 399-9700, gro.u1732231993oy4ch1732231993c@ahs1732231993atan1732231993
Taylor McKinnon, Center for Biological Diversity, (801) 300-2414, gro.y1732231993tisre1732231993vidla1732231993cigol1732231993oib@n1732231993onnik1732231993cmt1732231993
Sumer Shaikh, Sierra Club, (774) 545-0128, gro.b1732231993ulcar1732231993reis@1732231993hkiah1732231993s.rem1732231993us1732231993
Rebecca Fischer, WildEarth Guardians, (406) 698-1489, gro.s1732231993naidr1732231993aught1732231993raedl1732231993iw@re1732231993hcsif1732231993r1732231993