BLM to Approve Gas Drilling in Green River basin - Desolation Canyon
Utah - The Obama administration has decided to authorize nearly 1,300 new natural gas wells in
Utah’s Desolation Canyon wilderness and other remote areas of the Green River basin. It is
anticipated that these new leases will degrade the pristine region’s air quality and hurt
the state’s tourism industry, according to a coalition of environmental groups.
In approving the so-called Gasco development project, the Department of the Interior also
rejected calls by the Environmental Protection Agency and tens of thousands of citizens from
across the country to approve an alternative to Gasco’s proposal. This alternative would
have allowed for significant development while protecting the department’s plan to
designate Desolation Canyon as wilderness and reducing the overall footprint and impact of the
project.
“Secretary Salazar is making the wrong decision to approve the Gasco project in a way that
creates irreversible risks to Desolation Canyon,” said Peter Metcalf CEO/President of Black
Diamond, Inc. “This decision is particularly disappointing in light of the fact that
conservationists, and the EPA (with support of the leading companies in the American outdoor
industry) endorsed an alternative drilling plan that protected the sanctity of the Desolation
Canyon proposed wilderness, while allowing for robust drilling to occur on a huge parcel abutted
to the proposed wilderness area. It is truly tragic that the BLM can't show some small
degree of balance.”
The Desolation Canyon proposed wilderness is the largest unprotected roadless complex in the
lower 48 states. Centered around the Desolation Canyon stretch of the Green River, the
area’s spectacular solitude and endless vistas are awe-inspiring. But now this remarkable
place is once again in the crosshairs for destruction.
“It’s bewildering that Secretary Salazar – who has been such a strong advocate
of conserving America’s great outdoors --- would allow turning Desolation Canyon into an
industrial wasteland,’’ said Sharon Buccino, director of NRDC’s Land and
Wildlife program. “Desolation Canyon has some of the most stunning wilderness vistas found
anywhere. It is no wonder that EPA gave this proposal its worst environmental rating
possible.”
Gasco – a Colorado-based natural gas company – wants to drill nearly 1,300 new gas
wells in the area, including more than 200 new wells in the Desolation Canyon proposed wilderness
and gateway areas.
The administration analyzed two alternatives to the company’s proposed action, both of
which would have barred drilling in the Desolation Canyon proposed wilderness and while affording
greater protections for the Green River and Nine Mile Canyon badlands. But the administration
ended up supporting the company’s plans to drill in all these sensitive places.
This approval comes at a time when natural gas prices are at near-record lows due to an abundance
of gas supplies, and companies are idling drilling rigs in developed fields in the Uinta
Basin.
“Desolation Canyon and Nine Mile Canyon along the Green River are some of the wildest
places left in Utah, and they should be protected from drilling,” said Nada Culver,
director and senior counsel of The Wilderness Society’s BLM Action Center. “There are
more than 1,000 approved BLM drilling permits going unused by oil and gas companies in Utah
alone. We should take the most responsible approach to developing this area in order to preserve
the spectacular wilderness-quality lands, the rare and extraordinary rock art, and the threatened
plant and wildlife species in Desolation Canyon.”
The BLM itself has described Desolation Canyon as “…one of the largest blocks of
roadless BLM public lands within the continental United States. This is a place where a
visitor can experience true solitude – where the forces of nature continue to shape the
colorful, rugged landscape.”
Eastern Utah has experienced several years of record high winter-time ozone levels that is
largely linked to oil and gas development. According to Gasco’s own data, this project will
add to those unsafe pollution levels.
“Secretary Salazar’s approval of the controversial Gasco project stands in stark
contrast to the agreements worked out over the past few years between industry, the Interior
Department, and conservation groups over several natural gas projects in eastern Utah,”
said Stephen Bloch, an attorney for the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance. “There is
a proven, better way to bring parties together and produce a win-win solution. It is
inexplicable why the Secretary is turning his back on this approach.”
American Whitewater is coordinating next steps with our partners across Utah and the Colorado
River basin, and preparing for another round of Public Comment on the Final Environmental Impact
Statement, when it is released in April, 2012.
“The Desolation Canyon region is one of the most iconic landscapes of wildness that Utah is
known for," said Tim Wagner of the Sierra Club. “People from all over the world come
to Desolation every year for the many outdoor experiences. To permanently mar this area over 200
new natural gas wells is a serious error in land management decision-making.”
Nathan Fey
1601 Longs Peak Ave.
Longmont, CO 80501