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Margaret R. Bird (born 1947) is an economist and school trust lands activist in Utah. She is an executive director of the non-profit organization Children's Land Alliance Supporting Schools (CLASS). [1] She has served on the Utah Board of Oil, Gas, and Mining and is currently a member of the Draper Tree Commission.
Western Energy Alliance (WEA) is a regional and nonprofit, [1] membership-based organization. [1] It is a trade association that focuses on energy and public land issues in the thirteen-state Intermountain West of the United States. WEA's foundation was laid in 1974 as an Independent Petroleum Association of Mountain States (IPAMS).
A pipe leak or oil tanker spill – which the Yinka Dene Alliance deemed "inevitable" – could devastate the water supply, imperiling the ecosystem and local communities' health. [4] This posed a clear economic and cultural threat as well, since their ways of life depended on the waters, most notably through their fishing of the salmon population.
Oil and gas companies will have to pay more to drill on federal lands and satisfy stronger requirements to clean up old or abandoned wells under a final rule issued Friday by the Biden administration.
The Biden administration has issued more permits for oil and gas drilling on public land per month than the Trump administration did in its first three years, according to a new analysis of ...
From the 1950s to at least 2002, drilling for oil and gas on federal lands and waters produced the second largest source of revenue for the federal government other than taxes. [18] The Minerals Revenue Management (MRM) division of MMS was responsible for managing all royalties associated with both onshore and offshore oil and gas production ...
Venting and flaring activity from oil and gas production on public lands has significantly increased in recent decades. Between 2010 and 2020, total volumes of natural gas lost to venting and ...
Several coalitions and alliances produced formal declarations unequivocally rejecting the intrusion of an oil pipeline on aboriginal lands. These included Yinka Dene Alliance, [32] [33] Heiltsuk Nation, [34] [35] Coastal First Nations, [36] [37] [38] and Save the Fraser. [32]