February, in brief

Tyler McIntosh
Westwise
Published in
6 min readFeb 26, 2021
Representative Deb Haaland of New Mexico is likely to be confirmed as the next Secretary of the Interior.
She would be the first Native American to hold the position.

Key news from February:

  • The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee held a two day confirmation hearing for New Mexico Congresswoman Deb Haaland. If confirmed, she will become the first Native American Interior Secretary and the first Native American presidential cabinet member, making her nomination a historic choice. During the hearing, Deb Haaland focused on her bipartisan record. Haaland has the support of hundreds of national and regional organizations. Prior to her hearing, a groundswell of grassroots support called on senators to confirm her, even as fossil fuel senators who backed an extremist at Interior indicated that they would reject her nomination. Senators opposing her cite her “extreme” or “radical” views on public lands and energy policy — a level of criticism they seem to reserve for women of color. Despite opposition, Haaland appears headed for approval after ranking member Joe Manchin announced he would vote to confirm her.
  • This month, the Colorado College State of the Rockies project released the latest results from its annual Conservation in the West poll. The poll found that Westerners are overwhelmingly in favor of bold proposals to protect public lands, conserve nature, and tackle climate change. The majority of Westerners are concerned about the future of nature, and support strict limitations on oil and gas development on public lands.
  • The Biden administration was occupied by preventing some of the Trump administration’s last anti-conservation efforts from going into effect. They prevented rollbacks in protections included in California’s Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan (DRECP). The Interior Department also reversed course on devastating changes to the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) that were pushed through at the very end of the Trump administration. The new order prevents the program from being undermined while returning money to a grant program that benefits urban areas.
  • A federal court threw out a rule instituted by Trump’s EPA that would have prevented the use of public health data in agency decision-making.
  • In late January, President Biden issued an executive order temporarily pausing oil and gas leasing on public lands. He directed the Interior Department to evaluate the program for “fair return to taxpayers for the use of their resources.” As a result, the Biden administration’s pause on new oil and gas leases will include a review of oil and gas royalty rates charged for the extraction of public minerals.
  • Colorado lawmakers reintroduced the Colorado Outdoor Recreation and Economy (CORE) Act, a sweeping public land package that would protect 400,000 acres of new wilderness and recreation areas within the state. The bill is coming to the House floor as part of a large package of public lands bills.
  • The coal industry continued its downward spiral. A new report found that the U.S. is on track to cut out coal completely in a little over a decade as renewables become the cheaper option and pressure for action on climate grows. At the same time, declines continued to hit the Powder River Basin coal region.
  • The West continued to struggle with the new reality of a world in climate crisis. Following a devastating year of wildfires, heatwaves, and drought in 2020, all reports seem to suggest that 2021 could bring more of the same climate extremes, whether dry or wet. Snowpack is low across the West, with drought expected to persist into spring. At the same time, extreme precipitation events will likely drive continued catastrophes, as they did in California earlier this month.
  • Idaho Congressman Mike Simpson unveiled an energy and infrastructure proposal that would end litigation over endangered salmon in the Northwest, authorizing the removal of four dams on the Snake River in Washington beginning in 2030. The ambitious $33 billion plan serves as a new vision for the Northwest, providing the chance for a fresh start.
  • Documents filed in federal court showed evidence of political meddling by the Trump administration in the development of a rewritten plan for how California allocates its scarce water supplies among agricultural and municipal users as well as endangered species and ecosystems.

What to watch for in March:

  • After two days of testimony in front of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources committee, Interior Secretary nominee Deb Haaland will likely be voted out of committee and move to the full Senate for a final confirmation vote in March.
  • A package of public lands bills, including the Colorado Outdoor Recreation and Economy (CORE) Act will be voted on by the House.
  • Expect the Biden administration to announce additional nominees to round out the new leadership team at Interior and other agencies.

Best Reads of the Month

Biden administration welcomes suggestions for reaching 30x30 conservation goal

The Guardian

How environmentalism can center racial justice in 2021

Outside Magazine

The fight for an equitable energy economy for the Navajo Nation

High Country News

Federal oil, gas leasing pause has little impact on a Colorado drilling county

Greeley Tribune

Oil drilling on sensitive New Mexico public lands puts drinking water, rare caves at risk

National Geographic

A walk through Earth’s ancient rock record, and what it can tell us about climate change

The Atlantic

Push for new monument in Nevada would help the 30x30 goal, protect native spiritual center

Nevada Independent

Fact check: Frozen wind turbines are not the primary cause of Texas’ power outages

Texas Tribune

The oil industry’s public lands stockpile

Oil and gas companies are sitting on millions of acres of idle leases that they’ve acquired through a rigged system

The Center for Western Priorities’ interactive report on the oil industry’s public lands stockpile examines the millions of acres of idle leases stockpiled by the oil and gas industry. The report maps out oil and gas leases and finds that the oil industry is currently sitting on 9.9 million acres of idle leases across ten Western states — 47.4 percent of all leases in the region.

The “Oil Industry’s Public Lands Stockpile” report provides statistics on idle leasing in each Western state, in addition to interactive maps and case studies of landscapes locked up by the oil and gas industry’s stockpile of idle leases. The report updates part of an earlier geospatial analysis and storymap created in collaboration with The Wilderness Society, “America’s Public Lands Giveaway,” which examined the broken leasing system and instances of public land leases sold for bargain prices.

Read the report

Sally Jewell on climate change, extremism, and the power of listening

Highlights from a recent episode of the Center for Western Priorities’ “The Landscape” podcast

Western voters say “go big” on protecting public lands, conserving nature, and tackling climate change

Key findings from Colorado College’s 2021 Conservation in the West poll

Inside the Conservation in the West poll

The Colorado College State of the Rockies Project just released the results of the 11th annual Conservation in the West Poll. In this episode of The Landscape, we talk to pollsters Lori Weigel of New Bridge Strategy and Dave Metz of FM3 Research about this year’s results.

Follow along with highlights from the poll, the full poll results, and the oversample of voters of color.

Quote of the month

“Rep. Haaland’s nomination is both historic and long overdue. If confirmed, she would be the first Native American Cabinet member. Her record is in line with mainstream conservation priorities. Thus, the exceptional criticism of Rep. Haaland and the threatened holds on her nomination must be motivated by something other than her record.”

— Former senators Mark and Tom Udall
USA Today

Picture this

This month, the Colorado College State of the Rockies project released the latest results from its annual Conservation in the West poll. Westerners are overwhelmingly in favor of bold proposals to protect public lands, conserve nature, and tackle climate change. See a summary of the poll, or view the full results.

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Tyler McIntosh
Westwise

Conservation Policy & Research Manager | Center for Western Priorities | Denver, CO