Biden angers climate activists by approving controversial oil, gas project in Alaska
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden dismayed progressive allies across the continent Monday by approving a controversial oil and gas project in Alaska, a sharp pivot from the climate change offensive that marked his first two years in office.
The Willow project will see energy giant ConocoPhillips develop three drill sites in the petroleum-rich North Slope region, a “substantially” smaller footprint than the original five-site proposal, the U.S. Interior Department said.
The decision also requires ConocoPhillips to relinquish long-standing drilling rights on roughly 275 square kilometres of land in the northwestern region known as the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.
But climate activists say even the scaled-down version of the project is a “carbon bomb” capable of 300 million tonnes of pollution over the next 30 years that will kneecap Biden’s own efforts to ease U.S. dependence on fossil fuels.


