JUNEAU, Alaska — ConocoPhillips Alaska can proceed with an oil and gas exploration program in a portion of a vast petroleum reserve in the state after a federal judge denied a request from project opponents to halt it.
U.S. District Court Judge Sharon Gleason rejected a request by conservation groups and an Iñupiat-aligned group that sought to halt ConocoPhillips Alaska's planned exploration program in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska until the groups' legal challenge to the program's authorization by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management was resolved.
The groups said the federal government improperly analyzed the drilling program. The company, meanwhile, said the program was imperative to preserving its leases.
Gleason said in her order dated Tuesday that the groups had not shown that they have a ''fair chance of success'' on the merits of their claims.
The decision comes after a mobile drilling rig the company planned to use as part of its program toppled onto snow-covered tundra near existing oil and gas infrastructure while being transported last week. Attorneys for the company in a court filing said the incident would not deter ConocoPhillips Alaska's overall plans and that a substitute drill rig would be used.
The petroleum reserve, which covers an area roughly the size of Indiana on Alaska's North Slope, has been a focal point of a more aggressive oil and gas development push in the state backed by President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans. A law passed last year calls for at least five lease sales in the reserve over a 10-year period. The last lease sale was held in 2019.
The Bureau of Land Management in late November approved a program proposed by ConocoPhillips Alaska that included seismic surveys aimed at helping identify oil and gas reserves and plans to drill four exploration wells. The lawsuit, brought by Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic, the Center for Biological Diversity and The Wilderness Society, alleges the process around the company's application and its subsequent approval lacked transparency and was rushed.
In December, the federal land management agency issued a revised approval that it said took into account recent changes, including the Trump administration's adoption of a plan that would reopen most of the reserve to leasing. The groups that sued said in a court filing that the revised approval did not address their concerns.