‘Big Win’ for Public Lands and Climate as US Judge Reinstates Coal Lease Ban
Climate and Indigenous activists on Friday applauded the reinstatement of an Obama-era moratorium prohibiting new coal leases on all public lands until after the completion of a thorough environmental review.
Brian Morris, chief judge of the U.S. District Court in Montana, issued an order reinstating the 2016 moratorium, which Ryan Zinke, former President Donald Trump’s disgraced interior secretary, reversed the following year.
Anne Hedges of the Montana Environmental Information Center said in a statement that it’s past time that the Biden administration overturns this misguided action by the Trump administration.
“The coal leasing program on public lands is harmful to wildlife, waterways, our fragile climate, and taxpayers’ pocketbooks,” she continued, also urging action by the Biden administration.
“There’s no excuse for how long it has taken to require the administration to follow the law and protect public resources,” Hedges added. “This administration needs to act quickly and protect the climate from its deeply flawed coal leasing program.”
In 2019, Morris—an appointee of former President Barack Obama—ruled in favor of a coalition of tribal and environmental groups and ordered a fresh environmental analysis under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The groups sued again in 2020 after finding the review insufficient.
Earlier this month, Morris also rejected Trump-era U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) coal mining plans that the Biden administration defended in court.
President Joe Biden angered environmentalists for refusing to immediately reinstate the coal leasing moratorium, and for approving fossil fuel drilling permits on public and tribal lands at a faster rate than Trump or Obama.
Morris’ new ruling states that the BLM’s NEPA analysis “should have considered the effect of restarting coal leasing from a forward-looking perspective, including connected actions.”
“The ‘status quo’ that existed before the Zinke order was a moratorium on coal leasing,” Morris added, “because the baseline alternative must consider the status quo, BLM must have begun its analysis from that point.”
Other activists from groups that are plaintiffs in the case also cheered Morris’ ruling.
“This order marks a big win for our public lands and climate future,” Taylor McKinnon at the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) said in a statement. “Federal coal isn’t compatible with preserving a livable climate. The Biden administration must now undertake a full environmental review to bring the federal coal program to an orderly end.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org.