The Biden administration on Monday approved the controversial Willow oil project, clearing the way for one of the largest new oil and gas developments in Alaska in 20 years despite fierce opposition from environmental activists.
The move came as Biden also signaled sweeping future action to bar offshore drilling on 2.8 million acres in the Arctic Ocean in an appeal to critics who said the president betrayed his commitment to fight climate change.
The $8 billion Willow project, planned by Houston-based petroleum company ConocoPhillips, marks a shift in the Biden administration’s handling of major fossil fuel projects after previously approving few without congressional or court intervention.
The Biden administration was limited by legal restraints in reviewing the Willow project’s application, according to a White House official, who said the company had valid rights on the land because of decades-old leases.
The administration was convinced the courts would have blocked an outright rejection of the Willow project and could impose fines on the government, said the official, who spoke about the White House’s considerations on the condition of anonymity.
The approval of the Willow project was met with swift criticism by environmental activists, who had rallied under a #StopWillow hashtag on social media to try to halt the project.
Kristen Monsell, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, called Biden’s action’s “appalling” and vowed to continue fighting to keep Willow from breaking ground.
“People and wildlife will suffer, and extracting and burning more fossil fuel will warm the climate even faster,” Monsell said. “Biden has no excuse for letting this project go forward in any form.”
Abigail Dillen, president of Earthjustice, accused the Biden administration of “betraying its core commitment” of ending runaway climate change.
“ConocoPhillips’ Willow project shocks the conscience,” Dillen said. “It will open up the whole of the Western Arctic to drilling over many decades, devastating a fragile ecosystem and people who depend upon it.”
The fossil fuel industry applauded Biden for signing off on Willow but criticized the Arctic protections.
Frank Macchiarola, senior vice president of policy at the American Petroleum Institute, said the new rules on offshore drilling send “mixed signals” on energy policy.
“By imposing these restrictions, the Department of the Interior appears to be treating their statutory obligations as a bargaining chip,” Macchiarola said. He called on the Biden administration to focus instead on “real solutions” to deliver energy and cut down on emissions.
Contributing: The Associated Press
Reach Joey Garrison on Twitter @joeygarrison.