Environment

US Judge Throws Out Trump Policy Favoring Drilling Over Sage Grouse Protection

A US judge in Montana has thrown out a Trump administration directive that weakened an Obama-era policy aimed at protecting the threatened bird, invalidating hundreds of oil and gas leases on federal land in Montana and Wyoming.

Sage grouse

A US judge in Montana has thrown out a Trump administration directive that weakened an Obama-era policy aimed at protecting a threatened Western bird, invalidating hundreds of oil and gas leases on federal land in Montana and Wyoming.

In a ruling issued late on 22 May, District Court Judge Brian Morris sided with environmental groups that had challenged the administration’s 2018 policy reversal as well as three auctions in Montana and Wyoming in 2017 and 2018 that sold oil and gas leases in sage grouse habitat.

“All of our lease sales are on sound legal footing and in full compliance with” environmental laws, the Bureau of Land Management, the arm of the US Interior Department that oversees oil and gas leasing, said in an emailed statement.

The order was the latest legal blow to President Donald Trump's effort to increase energy production on federal lands by rolling back environmental regulation. Earlier this month, Judge Morris halted here nearly 300 of the same Montana leases, ordering an environmental analysis of the effect of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water.

“The decision here really struck down the administration’s basis for sacrificing all that sage grouse habitat for oil and gas leasing,” Earthjustice attorney Mike Freeman said in an interview.

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