As Oil Spill Cleanup Continues, Feds Prepare for Major Gulf Lease Sale

Despite President Biden鈥檚 pledge to phase out oil and gas leasing, the Interior Department will hold the largest-ever offshore auction next month.

Along the Gulf of Mexico, communities are still trying to understand the scope of the damage done at the end of August when Hurricane Ida triggered .

In Huntington Beach, California, local officials are on offshore oil drilling after a pipeline likely damaged by a ship鈥檚 anchor hemorrhaged an estimated 25,000 gallons of crude on October 1. Oil fouled beaches where threatened Western Snowy Plovers and, as in the Gulf, coated more than 100 birds.

The U.S. Department of the Interior, meanwhile, is preparing to auction off oil and gas leases across 81 million acres in the Gulf, the largest such sale ever undertaken.  

For environmental groups and some Gulf Coast residents, the Biden administration鈥檚 plan to issue more leases to oil companies鈥攊n a region expected to be battered by increasingly intense hurricanes鈥攊s alarming. Conservationists also argue that the November 17th Gulf auction and on 734,000 acres of federal lands undermine the climate agenda Biden is scrambling to salvage on Capitol Hill before next month鈥檚 international climate summit. And they say the president is breaking his repeated promises to make fossil fuel production on federal property a thing of the past.

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 make sense,鈥 says Kristen Monsell, oceans program litigation director with the Center for Biological Diversity. 鈥淚t鈥檚 completely hypocritical to on the one hand say we need to take bold action to address the climate crisis and on the other plan to hold the biggest offshore lease sale in U.S. history.鈥

Confusion about oil and gas policies has prevailed since Biden, just after taking office, paused the federal leasing program pending a review of its shortcomings. Officials were supposed to issue a report on that review鈥檚 findings over the summer, potentially pointing the way toward new royalty rates or other changes, but that still hasn鈥檛 happened. Meanwhile, several energy-producing states sued Interior over the pause, arguing that the department has a legal requirement to hold regular lease sales. In June, , ordering Interior to resume sales. 

The Biden administration has appealed that ruling but meanwhile is preparing the Gulf sale and planning for a not-yet scheduled auction in Alaskas Cook Inlet. These sales were part of a five-year offshore program issued under the Obama administration, and Bidens Interior says it has to move forward to comply with the court order. But critics are frustrated with the departments acquiescence. Despite the ruling, they assert, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and other officials still have broad discretion to decide where, when, and how much acreage to lease. In response to questions about why the department is putting such a vast area on the auction block, an Interior spokesperson directed 爆料公社 magazine to of and declined to comment further. 

Interior that areas leased in the Gulf sale could eventually yield up to 1.1 billion barrels of oil and 4.4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. The blocks on offer range from 3 to 231 miles offshore, with depths between 9 and 11,115 feet.

Hoping to halt the sale, environmental groups , arguing that Interior is working from an outdated 2017 review of the sale鈥檚 potential impacts. That analysis already had serious problems, they say, such as claiming that emissions would be higher without the lease sale, a conclusion based on the assumption that oil would be met in countries with fewer regulations. And they argue that important developments since then have only underscored the risks of new leasing, making the review even more flawed. 

For instance, in January scientists of a new species of marine mammal, Rice鈥檚 whale, which lives in the Gulf and likely numbers fewer than 100. Wildlife advocates say increased oil activity will put the critically endangered whales in greater jeopardy. Also, a year after the 2017 review, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued a special report showing that a widely accepted global target of limiting warming to 2 degrees Celsius was not enough to prevent catastrophic damage, and that 1.5 degrees should be the goal. In another report in August, that even 2 degrees would be out of reach without immediate, major reductions in emissions. 

鈥淭hey are just blazing forward with this lease sale without doing any subsequent environmental analysis,鈥 says Monsell, whose group is among the plaintiffs. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the essence of arbitrary decision making, in my mind.鈥 The groups are hoping for a decision in the case before any leases purchased next month can be finalized. The State of Louisiana has intervened in the case on Interior鈥檚 side and the American Petroleum Institute has filed a motion to do the same.

Also not considered in Interior鈥檚 analysis was a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report this year in federal oversight of oil and gas pipelines in the Gulf. Regulators lack a robust system for inspecting and detecting leaks from 8,600 miles of active pipelines in the Gulf, the report found. They also have allowed oil and gas companies to leave 97 percent of decommissioned pipelines鈥攁round 18,000 miles of them鈥攊n place, with no clear accounting of the risks they pose. A House committee approved a of last week that, if passed, would seek to improve oversight. 

Oil leaks from existing infrastructure are an inevitability in parts of the Gulf coast, and in particular for low-income communities of color, local advocates say. New Orleans-based Healthy Gulf, another plaintiff in the suit to stop next month鈥檚 lease sale, reports that offshore pipelines in the Gulf leak at the national rate, which they attribute to hurricanes and ocean forces. Using satellite imagery, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration identified 55 spills in Hurricane Ida鈥檚 wake. But given the oversight failures the GAO identified, the true toll is unclear.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to get a better picture of just how bad it is,鈥 says Dustin Renaud, communications director for Healthy Gulf. To that end, the group has set up a community science program in which volunteers pore over satellite images to look for oil sheens or other signs of leaks. 

It鈥檚 not yet clear how many tracts on offer in the Gulf will actually draw bids next month, and the companies that win the leases may sit on them for years without drilling. Nonetheless: 鈥淲e know that where we drill, we spill. We can鈥檛 keep doing the same things and expect different results,鈥 Renaud says. 鈥淓very oil spill started with a lease sale at some point.