By Barry Russell
This Friday marks Endangered Species Day, an event intended to
spotlight and encourage the conservation efforts underway to protect
endangered and threatened species and their habitats. As companies who
work every day to provide the energy we all rely upon, while protecting
the environment we all care about, America’s independent oil and natural
gas producers take great pride in the efforts they are making to
support species conservation across the country.
In the west,
independent oil and natural gas companies are working closely with
states, local communities and stakeholders, and conservation groups in
the development and implementation of state-based plans to conserve the
greater sage-grouse. Some of these initiatives include Colorado’s
Greater Sage-Grouse Conservation Plan and Wyoming’s Sage-Grouse Core
Area Program. One leading independent oil and gas company, for example,
runs an annual conservation and restoration project in the Powder River
Basin alongside the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Wyoming
Conservation Corps to thin and remove invasive trees across priority
sage-grouse habitat on BLM lands.
In recognition of the value of these collaborative efforts, Secretary of
the Interior Sally Jewell has stated that her department is “more
determined than ever to work with the states, ranchers, energy
developers, and other stakeholders who are putting effective
conservation measure in place” so as to avoid the need to list the
greater sage-grouse as endangered under the Endangered Species Act
(ESA).
In addition to supporting and complying with state-based
plans, oil and natural gas companies also utilize various resources and
techniques to limit the impact of their operations on sage-grouse and
other species. Thanks to the advancement of hydraulic fracturing and
improved horizontal drilling technologies, energy producers are able to
access reserves miles away from the well pad. This practice enables
operators to greatly reduce the number of wells required to develop oil
and natural gas, thus reducing land disturbances and fragmentation of
habitat. As Secretary Jewell has acknowledged, this practice gives
operators “an opportunity to have a softer footprint on the land.”
Many
energy companies in the 11-state range of the greater sage-grouse are
also consolidating their operations to limit surface disruptions and
adapting equipment to mirror the surrounding environment, reducing the
visual disturbance to the natural habitat. As a recent peer-reviewed
report from researchers at Anadarko Petroleum found, “new oil and gas
development is being deployed at lower pad densities and should reduce
impacts” on sage-grouse breeding ground. Companies also execute rigorous
reclamation plans after operations are complete, ensuring the well pad
area is restored to its original condition.
Russell is the president and CEO of the Independent Petroleum
Association of America, the leading, national upstream trade association
representing oil and natural gas producers that drill 95 percent of the
nation's oil and natural gas wells.
A PR piece by the industry, helping to build political cover for the non-listing.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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