Proposed Gas Lease Auction Near Chaco Culture National Historical Park Dropped

March 4, 2018
Pueblo Bonito at Chaco Culture National Historical Park/NPS
BLM officials have postponed an oil and gas lease auction for parcels near Chaco Culture National Historical Park so more studies into potential cultural impacts can be conducted/NPS

A proposed auction of oil and gas parcels near Chaco Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico has been put off for now, though it could come back to life, and there are other proposed leases in the region that are of concern to some environmental groups.

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management canceled the sale last week, with Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke explaining that there was a need for more consultation with tribes to understand their concerns over how the sale could impact cultural sites. The leases would have auctioned off an additional 4,434 acres in the Greater Chaco region for industrialized fracking.

“My job is to make sure that the local voices are heard, and the state and national interests are reflected. In this case, there is some concern about the proximity to Chaco of some of the leases and the uncertainty about cultural impacts,” Secretary Zinke said Thursday.

Some groups, including the Sierra Club and area tribes, maintained the BLM was basing the sale on an outdated Resource Management Plan that was written before new fracking methods were feasible in the region, and without meaningful tribal consultation or consent from Navajo Nation and Pueblos who consider Chaco sacred. 

There has been considerable opposition to the sale, with more than 450 administrative protests filed against it. The Navajo Nation and All Pueblo Council of Governors, National Congress of American Indians, 15 Navajo Chapter Houses, the New Mexico Legislature, and more than 400,000 citizens have requested a moratorium on drilling until health, cultural, and environmental impacts can be analyzed, according to a Sierra Club release. 

National Parks Conservation Association officials, while happy with the withdrawal, say there are other controversial lease auctions planned for the region. The New Mexico lease sale is one of three March lease sales that NPCA has protested. Other sales set for this month include parcels near Hovenweep National Monument in southeastern Utah, and Fort Laramie National Historical Site in Wyoming.

There has been a substantial increase in leases offered for sale near national parks since 2017, including parcels near Dinosaur National Monument, Zion National Park, Rocky Mountain National Park, Great Basin National Park, and others, NPCA said in a release.

"The secretary's decision is the right one for Chaco Culture National Historical Park and the important cultural resources it protects,” said Ernie Atencio, NPCA's New Mexico program manager. “National Parks Conservation Association, area tribes and other conservation groups have long advocated for the BLM to take a focused look at potential impacts to Chaco from new oil and gas development and plan for the protection of the important cultural and natural resources in the area. As evidence by the BLM’s postponement, such a collaborative plan is still badly needed."

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