Officials Say Plan Will Protect Crucial Winter Range, Sage Grouse Habitat, Recreational Uses
SALT LAKE CITY – In support of President Obama’s all-of-the-above energy strategy, and the Obama administration’s goal of continuing to expand responsible oil and gas production, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar today approved a major natural gas project in Utah’s Uinta Basin that could develop more than 3,600 new wells over the next decade, while safeguarding air quality and assuring the protection of critical wildlife habitat and outdoor recreation values.
The project will support up to 4,300 jobs during
development.
By signing the Record of Decision (ROD) for the
Greater Natural Buttes Project, proposed by Anadarko Petroleum Corporation,
Secretary Salazar approved up to 3,675 new gas wells in an existing gas
producing area in Uintah County, Utah.
The decision follows a landmark comprehensive
public consultation and conservation stakeholder involvement effort that
resulted in a balanced approach to energy production and environmental
protection that will boost America’s energy economy.
The project encompasses approximately 163,000
acres – but will bring new surface disturbance to just five percent of that
area (approximately 8,100 acres) as a result of the 1,484 well pads approved in
the ROD, which would be drilled over a period of 10 years.
Today’s announcement is part of the Obama
administration’s commitment to developing America’s abundant natural gas
resources in a way that can help fuel our economy and, according to independent
estimates, support more than 600,000 jobs by the end of the decade.
In 2011, U.S. natural gas production grew by
more than 7 percent – the largest year-over-year volumetric increase in history
– and easily eclipsed the previous production record set in 1973. Similarly, in
2011 domestic oil production reached its highest level in eight years, with
foreign oil imports continuing to decline.
“The President is focused on expanding safe and
responsible production of natural gas as part of an all-of-the-above energy
strategy that’s cleaner, cheaper, and full of new jobs,” said Secretary
Salazar.
“This agreement is a great example of how
collaboration can allow us to uphold America’s conservation values, while
bringing growth to Utah’s economy and further reducing our dependence on
foreign oil by developing our resources here at home.”
The new gas wells proposed under the plan would
support an annual average of 1,709 jobs directly and 1,212 jobs indirectly. At
peak development, the project would support 4,302 short-term jobs, and support
an average of 875 long-term jobs over the production life of the project.
“Secretary Salazar’s action today represents the
culmination of a comprehensive public involvement effort involving tribes and
numerous cooperators at the federal, state and local level to ensure we are
addressing environmental concerns early in the process, allowing energy
development to move forward with the support of everyone at the table,” said
Bureau of Land Management Director Bob Abbey.
The ROD was signed at a ceremony at the Kern
River Compressor Station in Salt Lake City. Secretary Salazar and Director
Abbey were joined by BLM Utah Director Juan Palma and representatives of
Anadarko, the Wilderness Society and the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.
The BLM prepared the Final Environmental Impact
Statement (FEIS) or the project in coordination with the Bureau of Indian
Affairs and Uintah County, which participated as formal cooperating agencies
during the EIS process.
The BLM also closely coordinated with the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and the Environmental Protection Agency to ensure
their concerns were addressed.
As a result of a collaborative process among
federal, state, local and tribal governments, Anadarko and the Utah
conservation community, the project will implement best management practices in
the project area to safeguard air quality and protect crucial big game winter
range, sage-grouse and sage-grouse habitat, sensitive soils, visual effects and
recreational use.
The
process that led to today’s decision is also in line with President Obama’s Executive
Order to coordinate the
efforts of federal agencies responsible for overseeing domestic natural gas
development.
The leases proposed for
infill development in the FEIS have valid existing rights, some of which date
back to the early 1950s. The total estimated cumulative disturbance, including
the existing gas development and proposed project, would be 20,615 acres, or
about 12.7 percent of the area.
The ROD was prepared after a 30-day waiting
period on the FEIS, which was released on April 5, 2012. It is available at http://www.blm.gov/ut/st/en/ fo/vernal/planning/nepa_.html.
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