Converse County Oil & Gas Drilling

Converse County Oil & Gas Drilling

Current Status:
Active

Date Filed:
Sep 7, 2022

Case Title:
Powder River Basin Resource Council and Western Watersheds Project v. U.S. Department of the Interior and U.S. Bureau of Land Management

Staff attorney(s):
Sarah Stellberg
Hannah (Clements) Goldblatt
Todd Tucci

Client(s):

Powder River Basin Resource Council

Western Watersheds Project

To Protect:

Air Quality

Sage-Grouse

Raptor Populations

National Parks

Nearby Communities

States:
Wyoming

Case Information:

May 16, 2024 — Advocates for the West filed our reply in support of summary judgment and response to cross-motions for summary judgment.

January 26, 2024 — Advocates for the West filed our summary judgment brief.

July 14, 2023 — Staff Attorneys Sarah Stellberg and Hannah Goldblatt along with Senior Attorney Todd Tucci traveled to Washington, D.C., where Sarah presented oral argument before the United States District Court for the District of Columbia in support of our motion for preliminary injunction.

March 13, 2023 — Advocates for the West filed our motion for preliminary injunction and supporting brief, along with five supporting declarations, to halt any further oil and gas development in the Converse County project area.

September 7, 2022 — Advocates for the West filed a lawsuit against the Bureau of Land Management targeting the Converse County Oil & Gas Project in the southern Powder River Basin of Wyoming.

The massive 5,000 oil well project, approved under the Trump administration, is projected to have a major impact on air quality locally and regionally, including in treasured landscapes of neighboring national parks. The Delaware-sized industrial project will also create irreversible negative impacts to wildlife through special exemptions from traditional habitat protection measures. Overall, the project threatens the survival of sage grouse and birds of prey throughout the project area.

A key claim in the lawsuit challenges the Bureau’s refusal to regulate “Fee/Fee/Fed” wells in the project area, which are wells that drill directionally into federal minerals from adjacent non-federal lands. This illegal Bureau practice allows fossil fuel companies to extract publicly-owned minerals without common-sense environmental protections. The Converse County project consists predominantly of Fee/Fee/Fed wells.