Colorado: Roan Plateau drilling plan back in federal court

Fossil fuel industry frustrated by federal delays

dfgh

The BLM, conservation groups and the fossil fuel industry are grappling with a development plan for the Roan Plateau in northwest Colorado.

By Bob Berwyn

SUMMIT COUNTY — The fossil fuel industry continues to battle over energy development in court, most recently by asking a federal appeals court to overturn a previous lower court ruling that spurred the Bureau of Land Management to reconsider its plan for northwest Colorado’s Roan Plateau.

Conservation groups joined the battle in late April, filing their response to the latest legal challenge, which would “turn back the clock” to Bush-era energy development policies, according to Earthjustice, which is representing community and environmental groups in the case.

At issue is how many wells will be drilled atop the plateau, which is billed by conservation advocates to have high natural resource values. The fight dates back to a development plan approved by the BLM under the Bush administration. (more…)

Colorado: More wrangling over the Roan Plateau, as the BLM takes comments for another environmental impact statement

sdfg

A view of the Roan Plateau from a NASA satellite.

BLM starts new environmental study for drilling leases in sensitive wildlife area

By Bob Berwyn

FRISCO — With comments coming in on a revised BLM study for fossil fuel development on Colorado’s Roan Plateau, it’s clear that there’s little common ground between the energy industry and conservation groups.

Hunters, anglers and environmentalists want the federal agency to set strict protections for natural resources, while oil and gas companies say the government needs to get on with opening the area for drilling as required under federal law.

A federal court last year ruled that the 2008 drilling plan didn’t consider conservation-oriented options, and that it didn’t adequately analyze the cumulative air quality impacts of oil and gas drilling. The BLM has acknowledged that developing up to 1,500 wells on the Roan Plateau would permanently alter some areas of high quality fish and wildlife habitat.

Meanwhile, fossil fuel stakeholders, represented by the West Slope Colorado Oil & Gas Association also submitted comments, explaining that federal law requires the Roan Plateau to be leased and calling on the BLM to make only the specific supplemental analysis required by the court. (more…)

Colorado: BLM plans new air quality studies for drilling

Lawsuit over environmental studies and permitting continues

A spiderweb of drill pads lace the countryside around the Roan Plateau. PHOTO COURTESY SKYTRUTH.

By Summit Voice

SUMMIT COUNTY — The BLM  said this week that it’s moving for a voluntary remand of  three oil and gas drilling projects in Garfield County in order to study potential air pollution impacts.

According to a press release from Earthjustice, the BLM says it will not approve additional drilling permits implementing the projects until it completes its additional analysis, but environmental groups claim the agency has been using invalid studies to permit new wells on a regular basis.

According to Earthjustice, the BLM permitting has been a sort of regulatory shell game, with the agency using a study that doesn’t cover all of the geographic area for which it’s issuing permits. The voluntary remand covers the authorization nearly 400 oil and gas wells.

The permitting has been  challenged in federal court by conservation groups represented by the public interest law firm Earthjustice. The groups — Wilderness Workshop, Natural Resources Defense Council, The Wilderness Society, and the Sierra Club — allege that the BLM violated federal environmental laws by approving oil and gas projects without conducting any environmental analysis of the air pollution they would cause.

Earthjustice attorney Alison Flint said the BLM’s decision doesn’t address the much larger problem targeted by the legal challenge. The three projects represent only a few examples of a broader practice in which BLM has approved at least 33 drilling projects – involving thousands of wells –with no air pollution analysis. (more…)

Federal court nixes BLM’s Roan Plateau drilling plan

Court says agency erred in approving the plan without a hard look at less harmful alternatives

Gas drilling pads dot the base of the Roan Plateau in western Colorado. PHOTO COURTESY ECOFLIGHT.ORG.

By Bob Berwyn

SUMMIT COUNTY – A federal judge Friday ruled that the BLM erred in its approval of a Bush-era drilling plan for the wildlife-rich Roan Plateau in northwestern Colorado.

“The court said it was illegal because the BLM didn’t take a hard look and didn’t look at alternatives,” said Earthjustice attorney Mike Freeman. “It essentially means the Roan will get another look.”

The court recognized the inherent conflict facing land management agencies. Here’s an excerpt from U.S. District Court Judge Marcia S. Krieger’s ruling:

“It is sufficient to note that, like many areas of Colorado, the area has been blessed with an abundance of two major resources, the uses of which are often in conflict. Its surface offers extensive and largely unspoiled (particularly in the areas atop the Plateau) scenic, ecological, and wildlife virtues. Below the surface, the Planning Area contains significant and valuable oil and gas reserves.”

Ultimately, federal agencies have to consider a range of alternatives that evaluates and discloses impacts on a comparative basis. In the Roan Plateau case, the BLM didn’t meet that requirement by eliminating a more protective option from the get-go. From the ruling:

“The Court turns first to the Plaintiffs’ argument that BLM’s decision to exclude
Alternative F (prohibiting leasing on the top of the Plateau and setting that area aside for conservation and recreation purposes) violated NEPA.”

Specifically, Judge Krieger ruled that the BLM violated the Administrative Procedures Act by failing to consider a community crafted alternative for drilling that would leave most of the top of the Roan Plateau untouched, and by failing to address cumulative air quality and potential ozone impacts.

The court declined to set aside leases that the BLM has already issued, saying such an action would fall outside the scope of the legal challenges to the process the agency used to evaluate the impacts of drilling.

Read the entire court ruling here.

“The Colorado Mountain Club applauds Judge Krieger’s decision. Interior Secretary Salazar and the BLM now have an opportunity to develop a better plan that gives the Roan the protection it deserves,” said Scott Braden, with the Colorado Mountain Club.

CMC has long maintained that most of the natural gas beneath the Roan Plateau can be recovered without developing any of the public lands atop the plateau, or critical wildlife lands either. Advances in drilling technology in the intervening years since this debate began only make it easier to access the gas resource in a less intrusive way.

“This is a victory for the people and wildlife of Colorado who value clean water and open space. The BLM now has a chance to go back and fix the problems with this plan to protect these values,” Braden said.

The BLM and the Barrett Corp. could not be reached for comment late Friday. This story will be updated when they respond to requests for comments.

Background

The case dates back to 2008 when the BLM sold leases on the plateau worth  $114 million, said to be the highest-yielding lease sales in the U.S. up to that date, but planning for the plateau goes back to 2002. Read some of the background here.

A coalition of 10 conservation groups sued the agency immediately protect the Roan, considered to be one of the most biologically diverse areas in Colorado.

“We’re basically talking about national park-quality lands,” Freeman said after presenting oral arguments in the case in late May.

Preceding this week’s ruling, leaseholder Bill Barrett Corporation and the environmental groups tried to reach a compromise in year-long series of court-ordered negotiations.

“Our argument is that they didn’t consider more protective alternatives for the Roan, as required by NEPA and that the BLM’s analysis only covered about 15 percent of the wells that will likely be drilled on top of the Roan … their own documents show that they expected many more wells … They have an obligation to analyze those,” Freeman said.

The conservation groups also argued that the BLM’s analysis fell far short in evaluating potential air quality impacts by skipping a required cumulative effects analysis that would show air quality impacts in the context of all other drilling under way or proposed for the region.

“What they did was assume that no drilling would happen anywhere else in Colorado, which is just nonsense,” Freeman said, adding that the agency’s evaluation of ozone impacts was also lacking.

Freeman said the conservation groups don’t think this is an all-or-nothing situation and are hoping for a plan that protects the natural resources of the area.

There’s no set schedule for a ruling in the case, but Freeman said he expects the judge to rule on the legal claims. If the court upholds some of the challenges, there would likely be a separate remedy phase, when the judge could order the BLM to red0 all or parts of the environmental analysis.

Morning photo: Terrible beauty

There’s a lot at stake …

Biologists have been trying to figure out why bee colonies are in decline, and the latest research is pointing directly to pesticides as the main cause. Click the pic to learn more.

SUMMIT COUNTY — I often use striking and beautiful images to illustrate environmental stories in the hope that the photo will catch readers eyes and get them to read the article, even if the news is not so good. So I’ve compiled a few of these photos in today’s photo essay, with each image linking back to the story referenced in the caption. Please share these photos and stories with your friends. (more…)

Colorado: Roan Plateau drilling plan back in court

Conservation groups say BLM botched environmental analysis

Gas drilling pads dot the base of the Roan Plateau in western Colorado. PHOTO COURTESY ECOFLIGHT.ORG. Click the image for more photos.

By Bob Berwyn

SUMMIT COUNTY — A long-running battle over the fate of northwestern Colorado’s Roan Plateau was back in U.S. District Court Tuesday for oral arguments before Federal Magistrate Kristen Mix.

Conservation groups who challenged a Bush-era drilling plan for the plateau say the Bureau of Land Management violated federal environmental laws in its analysis by ignoring key issues like air quality.

Federal attorneys countered that the administrative record shows that the agency followed all the required steps under the National Environmental Policy Act.

The case dates back to 2008 when the BLM sold leases on the plateau worth  $114 million, said to be the highest-yielding lease sales in the U.S. up to that date, but planning for the plateau goes back to 2002. Read some of the background here. (more…)

Mystery, murder and energy on the Roan Plateau

Meet Colorado author at the Next Page bookstore in Frisco, presenting his new mystery novel, Buried by the Roan.

Colorado author Mark Stevens presents his new novel at the Next Page bookstore in Frisco

By Summit Voice

SUMMIT COUNTY — Colorado author Mark Stevens will be at Frisco’s Next Page bookstore this weekend (Saturday, Aug. 27, 3 p.m.) to present and sign copies of his new book, Buried by the Roan.

The novel is the second in the Allison Coil mystery series and focuses on the fate of The Roan Plateau, the controversy over energy development and the mysterious death of a local ranch owner. The story is set in the Flat Tops Wilderness and surrounding communities of Glenwood Springs and Meeker.

Antler Dust, the first book in the series, twice made the Denver Post bestseller list and garnered some good reviews, including this blurb from New York times bestselling author Margaret Coel: “Buried by the Roan is flat-out terrific. Everything you expect from a first-rate mystery is here: Savvy sleuth Allison Coil, hunting guide on-top-of-her-game, gorgeous Colorado mountain setting, gripping story where the pages practically turn themselves, and eloquent writing to boot.” (more…)

Colorado: Feds list 2 rare West Slope plants as threatened

Parachute penstemon, also known as Parachute beardtongue, is a beautiful perennial with lavender-and-white, funnel-shaped flowers. It occurs in only six populations on and around the Roan Plateau. Only three of those populations are considered large enough to be stable, but two of them are on land owned by Occidental Petroleum. Two of the remaining populations are on top of the Roan Plateau in locations recently leased for oil and gas development. Conservation organizations are challenging the leasing on top of the Roan Plateau in court. Center for Native Ecosystems, the Colorado Native Plant Society, and Dr. Steve O’Kane (one of the botanists who discovered the species in the 1980s) petitioned in 2004 for the parachute penstemon to be moved from the Fish and Wildlife Service’s candidate list and given the protection under the Act it deserved. PHOTO BY STEVE O'KANE.

Tiny wildflowers threatened by oil and gas drilling, development and off-road recreation may get 45,000 acres of protected area under proposed critical habitat designation

By Summit Voice

SUMMIT COUNTY — After 31 years on a waiting list, a rare plant that grows only near DeBeque, Colorado finally will be protected under the Endangered Species Act, along with another rare Roan Plateau species vulnerable to impacts from oil and gas drilling, as well as off-road recreation.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced July 27 that the DeBeque phacelia and the Parachute penstemon both will be protected and proposed for critical habitat designations based on threats from current and proposed oil and natural gas drilling operations on public lands.

“To say that these protections are overdue would be an extreme understatement,” said Josh Pollock, conservation director with Rocky Mountain Wild. “But the most important thing is that they are in place now.  We hope it is in time to secure a future for these three parts of our web of life in Western Colorado along with the dozens of other rare species that carve out a life in the same difficult habitat.”

Parachute penstemon grows in only 6 populations on or near the base of the Roan Plateau, and DeBeque phacelia is found only in the vicinity of the growing town of DeBeque and South Shale Ridge.

The proposed habitat designation includes more than 19,000 acres for Parachute penstemon and almost 25,000 acres for the more widely distributed DeBeque phacelia. (more…)

Roan Plateau drilling plan heading back to court

Moonrise over the Roan Plateau. PHOTO COURTESY KURT KUNKLE.

Settlement talks fail, environmental groups pursuing their claim that a BLM management plan for the area is illegal

By Bob Berwyn

SUMMIT COUNTY — The fate of Northwest Colorado’s Roan Plateau is back in the hands of a federal judge after a year-long series of settlement talks about an oil and gas drilling plan ended in deadlock.

The Roan Plateau, north of Rifle, is recognized as a biological hotspot for species diversity, including pure strains of native trout, rare plants and old-growth Douglas fir. It’s also a hotspot for natural gas, and a drilling plan approved under the Bush administration could result in thousands of new wells being drilled on the Plateau.

Conservation groups have spearheaded a fierce campaign to protect the plateau from industrial development, including a lawsuit that challenged the Bureau of Land Management-approved drilling plan, as well as the leases that have already been issued. The plan has been widely viewed as a sweetheart deal for former Vice President Dick Cheney‘s energy cronies. (more…)

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 5,561 other followers