Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Biden's Goal To Eliminate Oil Industry Jeopardizes Nearly $2 Billion For National Parks (oops)

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Lustern

unread,
Nov 26, 2022, 1:17:06 PM11/26/22
to
The asshole in charge has done it again!

"Biden’s Goal To Eliminate Oil Industry Jeopardizes Nearly $2 Billion For
National Parks (oops)"

<https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/4111988/posts>

"Biden’s war on fossil fuels may reduce funding for America’s national
parks, according to the Western Energy Alliance, a nonprofit energy
industry association for the U.S. West.

The Great American Outdoors Act (GAOA), which was passed in August 2020,
provides $1.9 billion for public lands and national park restoration,
primarily from onshore oil and gas development on federal lands.

The act combined the restoration and Land and Water Conservation funds,
which supplies $900 million in matching grant money for state and local
parks.

No Federal Oil

Biden campaigned on a promise that he was going to eliminate the oil
industry, and since taking office he has taken more than 100 steps to
make good on that promise. Net-zero goals, if achieved, will replace all
coal, oil and gas with wind, solar and other forms of renewable energy.

If that happens, the alliance claims, the royalties from renewable
industries operating on federal lands would only generate $11.5 million
for the restoration fund.

Biden “promised no federal oil at all. That was his campaign pledge,”
Kathleen Sgamma, president of the Western Energy Alliance, told Cowboy
State Daily. “Now, he ran into this nasty thing called the law.

“But if his policies were taken to their logical conclusion – no more
federal oil and gas would be allowed – then there would be no funding for
the Great American Outdoors Act.”

Biden had placed a moratorium on new oil and gas leasing, but a judge in
the Western District of Louisiana issued a permanent injunction against
the Biden administration. The ruling concluded that the moratorium took
steps reserved for Congress and violated the Mineral Leasing Act and the
Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act.

Basically Nothing

Of the $1.9 billion in funding for the GAOA, 70% goes to the National
Park Service to reduce deferred maintenance in national parks. The rest
goes to various agencies that manage federal lands.

The GAOA provided $204 million in funding for projects in Yellowstone
National Park, including repairs to historic buildings and roads to the
Old Faithful geyser. The fund may also support repair projects from last
summer’s floods.

The fund also provided $145 million for projects in California’s
Yosemite, and $219 million for projects in Blue Ridge, which straddles
the North Carolina and Virginia border.

Sgamma said royalties from oil and gas production on federal land will
support the restoration fund for some time. Existing leases will continue
to produce for a while, but as production at those wells decline, the
royalties will evaporate.

“The president’s preferred wind and solar contributes basically nothing
to conservation,” Sgamma said."
0 new messages