Trump Administration OKs New Drilling and Fracking on One Million Acres Across Central California

Rampant oil development on the eastern edge of Carrizo Plain National Monument.

Central Calif.—Today, the Trump administration finalized a study on the environmental and public health impacts of fracking, the last step in completing a Resource Management Plan that opens more than one million acres of lands throughout the coastal and interior regions of central California to new oil drilling and fracking. The action ends a 5-year moratorium on new oil and gas leasing on federal lands in California.

The study, which includes eight Central California counties from San Luis Obispo County in the north to Ventura County in the south and from the coast inland to the southern Sierra Nevada range, was fast-tracked by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to adhere to an executive order issued by the Trump administration. It found that fracking poses no significant impacts and recommended no changes to the plan that allows drilling and fracking on federal lands and mineral estate within or adjacent to national forests, national parks, national monuments, national wildlife refuges, state and local parks, beaches, ecological reserves, drinking water reservoirs, rivers, school campuses, segments of the Pacific Crest Trail, and other areas especially sensitive to environmental and health impacts.

Students at Cate School with Los Padres National Forest and lands to be open for new oil drilling and fracking in the background. Photo by Cate School.

Click here for an interactive map showing the lands now open for leasing.

“If the BLM didn’t find impacts from oil drilling and fracking next to schools, under rivers and reservoirs, and in habitat that harbors endangered animals, it’s because they didn’t look. The BLM has wasted taxpayers’ money and will cause irreparable damage with this sham study that places our treasured landscapes and communities at great risk.”

Jeff Kuyper, ForestWatch Executive Director

Nearly one-hundred thousand area residents submitted letters and hundreds attended public meetings expressing concern over water and air pollution, public health and climate impacts, and damage to protected wildlife habitat and sensitive species. The BLM refused to consider most public input by rejecting what it considered form letters, verbal testimony, and comments that did not provide what it termed “substantive” information.

ForestWatch with allies delivering letters and postcards to the Bureau of Land Management in Bakersfield.

Cities, counties, Native American tribes and organizations, NGOs, the US Navy, and elected officials were among those who sent letters opposing the plan which would allow oil companies to lease federally controlled mineral rights for oil development for as little as $2 an acre. Santa Barbara County and the cities of San Luis Obispo, Ojai, and Carpinteria all passed resolutions opposing the administration’s plan to allow oil drilling and fracking that would threaten public resources and current land use. Once the federal leases are purchased, the agencies will have little authority over how the lands are developed and whether impacts are mitigated.

“Every step of the way, the Trump administration declined to do its job to put public health and the safety of the environment before corporate interests. It’s sad to see such disregard for the future of our public lands and the communities that depend on them.”

Rebecca August, ForestWatch Advocacy Director

Due to a technicality invoked by the Trump administration, there is no formal appeal or public review process for the BLM’s decision. ForestWatch is working with its partners to evaluate next steps. The matter could end up back in federal court. A judge ordered the BLM study in response to a 2016 lawsuit brought by ForestWatch and the Center for Biological Diversity.

Parcels near Lopez Lake are now open to new oil drilling and fracking leases. Photo by Dan Lambert.
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