Center for Biological Diversity

For Immediate Release, February 19, 2020

Contact:

Wendy Park, Center for Biological Diversity, (510) 844-7138, wpark@biologicaldiversity.org
Linda Baker, Upper Green River Alliance, (307) 367-3670, linda@uppergreen.org
Kelly Fuller, Western Watersheds Project, (928) 322-8449, kfuller@westernwatersheds.org
Sarah Stellberg, Advocates for the West, (208) 342-7024 x 209, sstellberg@advocateswest.org

Legal Petition Aims to Protect Wyoming’s Path of the Pronghorn From Massive Drilling Project

CASPER, Wyo.— Conservation groups today filed a legal petition challenging the Trump administration’s plan to allow 3,500 new gas wells in southwestern Wyoming. The massive frack-field expansion could block the ancient Path of the Pronghorn and prevent access to winter ranges that the animals need to survive.

The iconic 170-mile migratory path connects Grand Teton National Park and crucial winter range farther south in the Upper Green River Basin. Drilling in the area could eliminate Grand Teton’s entire population of roughly 300 pronghorns.

“This plan would sacrifice Grand Teton’s magnificent pronghorn herd and one of North America’s oldest migration corridors to enrich fossil fuel companies,” said Wendy Park, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “It’s obscenely cruel and shortsighted, and it’s typical of the devastating damage the Trump administration’s doing to our public lands.”

Today’s petition, filed in U.S. District Court in Casper, says the Bureau of Land Management approved the 140,000-acre Normally Pressured Lance project without properly analyzing the potential harm to pronghorn and greater sage grouse from well pads, roads, pipelines and other infrastructure.

The plan allows Jonah Energy to develop 350 gas wells annually over 10 years within a 220-square-mile area of sagebrush habitat that pronghorns and sage grouse rely on for their survival. The larger Sublette pronghorn herd, which includes the Grand Teton herd, also uses the project area for migration and crucial habitat.

“The Sublette pronghorn herd has already declined by 40% in the last decade,” said Linda Baker, director of the Upper Green River Alliance. “We are losing the pronghorn migration corridors that lead to crucial winter ranges in the Upper Green River Basin. It is time for BLM to responsibly manage these vital habitats for all wildlife reliant on the sagebrush sea.”

The pronghorn migratory path is one of North America’s last remaining long-distance land migrations and one of the longest in the western hemisphere. While the path’s northern reach to Grand Teton National Park is federally protected, its southern section has been narrowed by two neighboring gas fields.

Studies show pronghorn won’t deviate from the ancient routes, so blocking access to these vital habitats will likely destroy the park’s entire pronghorn herd and further reduce the Sublette pronghorn population.

More than a third of the Jonah Energy project is also in key greater sage grouse habitat, which includes breeding grounds. Almost one-fifth is in the birds’ only state-designated winter concentration areas in Wyoming. During many winters 1,500 or more sage grouse gather there to forage on taller sagebrush stands above the snow, their only food source during Wyoming’s severe winters.

“Sage grouse and pronghorns just can’t catch a break,” said Kelly Fuller, energy and mining campaign director at Western Watersheds Project. “The 3,500 NPL gas wells will add to the damage already being done by widespread oil and gas development and out-of-control livestock grazing, not just in Wyoming but across public lands in the West.”

Both sage grouse and pronghorn avoid oil and gas development, which causes their populations to decline. Studies show pronghorn abandon high-quality habitat or reduce foraging time near oil and gas development, while sage grouse avoid winter habitat within 1.2 miles from development.

“These wildlife impacts are avoidable. That’s the greatest shame,” said Sarah Stellberg, an attorney for Advocates for the West. “BLM needlessly and unlawfully exempted Jonah Energy from restrictions designed to protect these species, at great cost to Wyoming’s Green River Basin.”

The Normally Pressured Lance Project also includes lands that are the ancestral homeland of the Shoshone, Bannock, Crow, Arapaho, Northern Ute and Blackfeet people.

Conservation groups originally challenged the project in an April 2018 lawsuit filed in federal court in Idaho. In July some of the claims were transferred to U.S. District Court in Wyoming.

Today’s petition launches the case in the Wyoming court. In the petition, the Center for Biological Diversity, Upper Green River Alliance and Western Watersheds Project are represented by attorneys from the Center and Advocates for the West.

NPL_pronghorn_Media_map_by_Kara_Clauserr_FPWC-scr.jpg
Path of the Pronghorn and Wyoming gas fields. Kara Clauser/Center for Biological Diversity Image is available for media use.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.7 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

Western Watersheds Project is a nonprofit environmental conservation group working to protect and restore wildlife and watersheds throughout the American West.

The Upper Green River Alliance is a non-profit conservation organization based in Pinedale, Wyoming with over 200 supporters dedicated to protecting our amazing wildlife, clean air and clear water in the Upper Green River Basin.

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