09-12-04
A US federal oil and gas lease auction will offer companies the chance to bid
for drilling rights on roadless tracts in a popular national forest,
conservation groups say. The auction will be run by the Bureau of Land
Management and offers 16,700 acres of land in Utah's Uinta National Forest,
according to conservation and sportsmen groups. But the Forest Service said drilling rights won't necessarily lead to surface
occupancy or road-building. Energy companies could use slant drilling to reach
underground oil or gas pockets from outside the roadless parcels, said Kim
Martin, forest engineer for the Uinta National Forest. Peter Metcalf, president of the Salt Lake City-based Black Diamond Equipment,
said oil and gas development would ruin the qualities that customers seek when
they hike in the area. Lee Peacock, president of the Utah Petroleum Association, said some companies
obtain leases to conduct seismic surveys that don't disturb public lands. But he
also said the nation needs resources that are under more sensitive areas.
The bureau pulled from the offering parcels of land within view of Hovenweep
National Monument on the Utah-Colorado border.
Source: APUS activists keep eye on oil and gas leases in national forest lands
The areas are popular with hikers, hunters and anglers, and shelter wildlife
such as elk, bald eagles, sage grouse and mule deer.
A coalition of conservation and outdoor industry groups asked the Forest Service
to withdraw the lands from auction, but Martin said the Forest Service finished
an environmental impact statement several years ago that cleared them for
leasing.
"It's bad policy and a bad deal -bad for people, bad for the outdoor
industry, and bad for Utah's economy that is better served by sustainable
recreation than one-time drilling," he said.
"Everyone wishes we could find oil and gas in nice, easy places, but those
places are gone, used up. The oil and gas potential is evolving into more
sensitive areas. We have to make a decision as a society to allow the
responsible development of oil and gas leases on public lands," he said.
The possibility of drilling on those tracts drew protests from archaeologists,
conservation groups and a former park ranger.