Review of U.S. federal oil, gas leasing program being finalized internally -Haaland
She did not comment on what the department plans to do with those lease sales because of ongoing litigation.
A highly anticipated review by the U.S. Interior Department of the federal oil and gas leasing program is undergoing final internal review and should be released "very soon," Interior Secretary Deb Haaland told a Senate hearing on Tuesday. President Joe Biden announced the review shortly after taking office in what was widely viewed as a first step to fulfilling his campaign promise of banning new federal drilling leases and rapidly slashing greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade to fight climate change.
Haaland had said previously that the review would be completed by "early summer." The Biden administration earlier this year stopped holding government drilling auctions, pending the review, but a federal judge last month ruled that his leasing freeze was unlawful.
Wyoming Senator John Barrasso, a Republican, asked Haaland at the Senate energy committee hearing whether the Interior Department would reschedule two lease sales that would have taken place in the first two quarters of the year. She did not comment on what the department plans to do with those lease sales because of ongoing litigation.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
- READ MORE ON:
- Interior
- Joe Biden
- Biden
- Deb Haaland
- Interior Department
- Republican
- John Barrasso
- Haaland
- Senate
ALSO READ
US House expected to vote Thursday on domestic surveillance bill, Republican lawmaker says
US House could vote Thursday on surveillance bill, Republican lawmaker says
House to make another attempt at reauthorizing US spy program following Republican dissent
US House could vote again on surveillance bill, Republican lawmaker says
As foreign leaders urge US Ukraine support, Republicans look to Trump