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Public Lands or Oil Fields? Inside the 'One Big Beautiful Bill'

Contrasting landscapes: lush forest with elk and river on the left, industrial oil field with smoking towers on the right at sunrise.

I. Introduction: The Pivot to Energy Dominance

The trajectory of United States public land management has historically oscillated between the poles of preservation and utilization. However, the period commencing in January 2025 and extending through early 2026 represents not merely a fluctuation within this historic norm, but a fundamental rupture—a calculated and systemic restructuring of the federal estate. This era, defined by the legislative vehicle known as the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (H.R. 1) and the administrative doctrine of "Energy Dominance," has witnessed the most significant rollback of conservation protections and the most aggressive expansion of extractive rights in nearly a century.

The policy landscape of the mid-2020s is characterized by a deliberate rejection of the "30x30" conservation framework—which sought to protect thirty percent of U.S. lands and waters by 2030—in favor of a utilitarian paradigm where the value of public land is measured primarily in British Thermal Units (BTUs) and barrels of oil equivalent (BOE). This shift is not incidental; it is the explicit objective of a coordinated legislative and executive strategy designed to maximize domestic production of fossil fuels, minimize regulatory friction, and devolve federal authority to state governments.1

The mechanisms employed to achieve this transformation are manifold. They range from the blunt force of budget reconciliation legislation that mandates lease sales and slashes royalty rates, to the precise surgical rescission of administrative rules that once elevated conservation to the status of a legitimate "use" of public lands.3 Simultaneously, the administration has utilized the Antiquities Act not to designate new monuments, but to dramatically reduce existing ones, while deploying novel legal theories to transfer federal assets directly to states, as seen in the conveyances of recreation areas in Utah and industrial corridors in Alaska.5

This report provides an exhaustive analysis of this "Great Reallocation." It examines the legislative architecture of H.R. 1, the biological and physical consequences of "streamlined" environmental reviews on vulnerable species like the Rice’s Whale and the Greater Sage-Grouse, and the geotechnical risks associated with accelerating infrastructure in thawing permafrost zones. By synthesizing legislative texts, biological assessments, lease sale data, and economic projections, we illuminate the profound and likely irreversible alteration of the American landscape that has occurred in the span of a single year.

II. The Legislative Architecture: H.R. 1 and the "One Big Beautiful Bill"

The engine driving the 2025 energy transformation is the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (H.R. 1), signed into law on July 4, 2025.7 While ostensibly a budget reconciliation package addressing broad swaths of federal spending and taxation, H.R. 1 serves as the statutory backbone for the administration's energy agenda, effectively codified the "Drill, Baby, Drill" slogan into federal law.

The Reconciliation Mechanism and Statutory Mandates

The use of the budget reconciliation process was a tactical necessity. By categorizing the bill as a budgetary measure, the House and Senate leadership were able to bypass the sixty-vote filibuster threshold in the Senate, passing the legislation with a simple majority.4 This procedural pathway, however, required that every provision within the bill have a direct impact on the federal budget—a requirement that led to the heavy emphasis on leasing revenues and royalty structures.

H.R. 1 stripped the Department of the Interior (DOI) of its traditional discretionary authority to schedule, pause, or cancel lease sales based on environmental or market conditions. Instead, the Act imposed rigid statutory quotas. Specifically, it mandated that the DOI conduct a minimum of 30 offshore oil and gas lease sales in the Gulf of America (formerly the Gulf of Mexico) over a specified period, regardless of departmental readiness or environmental findings.8 Furthermore, it required the immediate reinstatement of lease sales in Alaska’s Cook Inlet and the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A), explicitly overriding previous administrative cancellations.4

This shift from discretionary management to statutory mandate represents a profound change in administrative law. Historically, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) acted as stewards, balancing the mandate to lease against the mandate to protect. H.R. 1 effectively curtailed this balancing act, converting the agencies into administrative processors of statutorily required auctions.

Fiscal Restructuring: Royalty Rates and Tax Incentives

A central tenet of H.R. 1 is the incentivization of investment through fiscal relief. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) of 2022 had raised the minimum royalty rate for offshore oil and gas leases from 12.5 percent to 16.67 percent, attempting to bring federal rates closer to the higher rates charged by state governments and private landowners. H.R. 1 reversed this, mandating a return to the statutory minimum of 12.5 percent for offshore leases.8

Proponents of this reduction, including the American Petroleum Institute (API), argued that the higher rate discouraged investment in a capital-intensive industry, particularly as operators moved into deeper, riskier waters.9 By lowering the rate, the legislation aimed to make U.S. offshore acreage globally competitive. However, critics noted that this reduction effectively transferred potential public revenue directly to private operators, estimating the loss to the Treasury in the billions over the multi-decade lifespans of these leases.10

In addition to royalty cuts, H.R. 1 codified the immediate deductibility of "intangible drilling costs" (IDCs). IDCs include expenses for fuel, labor, hauling, and site preparation—costs that do not have a salvage value. Allowing companies to deduct these costs immediately, rather than depreciating them over time, provides a significant up-front tax benefit, effectively subsidizing the risk of exploration.9 This tax treatment stands in stark contrast to the handling of renewable energy investments under the new law.

The Dismantling of the Green Energy Framework

While H.R. 1 smoothed the path for fossil fuel capital, it erected significant barriers for renewable energy. The legislation initiated the phase-out of the "tech-neutral" investment and production tax credits (ITC/PTC) for wind, solar, and battery storage, with the phase-out scheduled to begin in 2032.7

More immediately disruptive were the new "Foreign Entity of Concern" (FEOC) restrictions. H.R. 1 introduced complex compliance requirements prohibiting the use of components or minerals sourced from FEOCs (primarily targeting China) in projects claiming federal tax credits.7 While framed as a national security measure, the immediate implementation of these rules—without a transition period for supply chain adjustment—created chaos in the solar and battery sectors, which remain heavily reliant on global supply chains.

Economic analyses by the Rhodium Group and Energy Innovation project that these provisions will lead to the cancellation of approximately $522 billion in planned clean energy investments.11 The "crowding out" effect is substantial: by subsidizing fossil fuel operational costs while simultaneously injecting regulatory uncertainty into the renewables market, H.R. 1 actively reshapes the energy economy, favoring incumbent hydrocarbon industries over emerging green technologies.10

III. Administrative Rollback: The Death of the Conservation Rule for Public Lands

Parallel to the legislative overhaul of H.R. 1, the executive branch launched a targeted regulatory campaign to dismantle the "Conservation and Landscape Health Rule." Finalized in May 2024, this rule had been hailed as a landmark modernization of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA) of 1976.3

The Philosophy of "Multiple Use"

FLPMA mandates that the BLM manage public lands for "multiple use and sustained yield." Historically, "multiple use" was interpreted as a balance of extractive and recreational activities—grazing, timber, mining, and off-road driving. The 2024 Rule attempted to modernize this by formally defining "conservation" as a distinct "use" within the multiple-use framework. This legal innovation allowed the BLM to issue "restoration leases" and "mitigation leases," permitting organizations to lease land not for extraction, but to restore ecosystem health or offset impacts elsewhere.13

The 2025 rescission of this rule, proposed in September 2025, represented a philosophical and legal reversion. The administration’s argument, detailed in the Federal Register, posited that "conservation" is not a "use" but rather a state of "non-use" or "withdrawal".15 By this logic, leasing land to leave it alone (or to actively restore it without commercial extraction) violates the FLPMA mandate to manage lands for productivity.

The Rescission Process and Public Opposition

The proposal to rescind the rule generated intense public engagement. Over 216,000 public comments were submitted, with analysis suggesting that 98 percent of the comments opposed the rescission.13 Environmental groups, tribal nations, and outdoor recreation businesses argued that the 2024 rule provided a necessary mechanism to combat climate change and biodiversity loss. They contended that "resilience" is a prerequisite for "sustained yield"—that without healthy landscapes, there can be no grazing or recreation in the long term.17

Despite this overwhelming public sentiment, the BLM proceeded with the rescission, citing the need to remove "regulatory uncertainty" and "burden" on extractive industries.13 The rescission effectively abolished the market for conservation leases before it could fully form, forcing mitigation dollars back into less transparent and less effective channels, and reasserting the primacy of extraction as the dominant interpretation of "multiple use".14

NEPA Streamlining and the "Six-Month Shot Clock"

To operationalize the lease sales mandated by H.R. 1, the DOI issued new instruction memorandums in May 2025 that fundamentally altered the environmental review process under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).2

The new policy imposed a strict six-month timeline for the completion of oil and gas lease parcel reviews, measured from the initial public scoping to the lease sale date. Crucially, the policy prohibited BLM field offices from deferring parcels to conduct additional site-specific research.2 Previously, if a biologist identified a potential conflict—such as a raptor nest or a cultural site—that required a seasonal survey, the parcel could be deferred to a later sale. The new "simultaneous review" directive removed this safety valve.

This prioritization of speed over analytical depth forces agency staff to rely on existing, often outdated, data. It shifts the burden of risk from the developer to the public resource; if a sensitivity is missed during the rushed review, it is often discovered only after a lease has been sold and rights have vested, making protection significantly more difficult and legally perilous.2

IV. The Marine Frontier: The Gulf of America and Acoustic Trauma

Nowhere is the shift in policy more visible—or more audibly destructive—than in the Gulf of Mexico, officially rebranded by executive order as the "Gulf of America".19 This renaming was symbolic of a deeper assertion of national ownership and a rejection of internationalist environmental cooperation.

The 11th National OCS Program

The Biden Administration’s offshore leasing program had been the smallest in history, scheduling only three sales over five years. The Trump Administration’s 2025 response was to terminate that program and launch the "11th National OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program" for 2026-2031.20

The draft of this new program is expansive, proposing up to 34 lease sales across 21 planning areas. This includes areas that have been off-limits for decades, including the Atlantic coast, the Pacific coast, and the Eastern Gulf of Mexico.20 The inclusion of these frontier areas signals a direct confrontation with coastal states like California and Florida, setting the stage for protracted litigation over the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA), which gives states a voice in federal offshore activities.

The Rice’s Whale: A Species on the Brink

The expansion of leasing in the Gulf of America has placed the oil industry on a collision course with one of the planet's rarest animals: the Rice’s Whale (Balaenoptera ricei). Only recognized as a distinct species in 2021, the Rice’s Whale has a population estimated at fewer than 100 individuals.21

Physically, the Rice’s Whale is a slender baleen whale, reaching lengths of up to 40 feet. Unlike other baleen whales that migrate vast distances, the Rice’s Whale is a resident species, remaining in the Gulf year-round. It was historically believed to be restricted to the DeSoto Canyon in the northeastern Gulf. However, recent acoustic monitoring and sightings have confirmed that its range extends significantly westward into the central Gulf—directly into the primary lease areas offered in Sales 259 and 261.21

The whales are "surface-obligate" feeders at night, diving deep during the day to feed on demersal fish and surfacing at night to rest and thermoregulate. This behavior makes them exceptionally vulnerable to vessel strikes, as they spend nearly half their time within 15 meters of the surface, often invisible to large ships in the dark.21

The Physics of Seismic Airgun Blasting

The most pervasive threat from the 2025 leasing expansion is not the drilling itself, but the exploration that precedes it: seismic airgun surveying. To map the subsea geology and identify potential hydrocarbon reservoirs, exploration vessels tow arrays of airguns—pneumatic devices that release compressed air into the water column.22

Mechanism:

  1. Compression: The airguns are charged with air pressurized to approximately 2,000 pounds per square inch (psi).

  2. Release: The guns fire simultaneously, releasing a bubble of high-pressure air.

  3. Collapse and Pulse: The rapid expansion and subsequent collapse of this bubble generates a high-intensity acoustic pulse.

  4. Propagation: The sound wave travels down through the water column, penetrates the seafloor, bounces off geological strata, and returns to the surface to be recorded by hydrophones.24

Acoustic Impact:

The source level of a seismic array can exceed 260 decibels (dB) relative to 1 micropascal at 1 meter. For context, the decibel scale is logarithmic; this is orders of magnitude louder than a jet engine at takeoff (approx. 140 dB in air). Because water is a much denser medium than air, sound travels almost five times faster and attenuates (weakens) much more slowly.25

For the Rice’s Whale, which relies on low-frequency sound (typically 20-100 Hz) to communicate with conspecifics, navigate, and find mates, seismic blasting is catastrophic. The frequency range of the airgun pulses overlaps almost perfectly with the whale’s communication range. The noise from a single survey can blanket an area of over 100,000 square miles, raising the ambient noise floor by 20-30 dB.25

This creates a phenomenon known as "acoustic masking." Just as it is difficult to hold a conversation at a rock concert, whales cannot hear each other over the seismic din. This masking reduces their "communication space"—the area over which they can effectively communicate—by up to 90 percent.26 Chronic exposure leads to "habitat displacement," where whales abandon their preferred feeding grounds to escape the noise, leading to nutritional stress, suppressed immune systems, and reduced reproductive success.27

Litigation and Lease Sale 261

The conflict over the Rice’s Whale came to a head with Lease Sale 261. In March 2025, a federal court ruled that the BOEM had violated NEPA by failing to adequately analyze the impact of the sale on the whale, particularly given the new data on its expanded range.27 The court also found the agency’s greenhouse gas analysis to be misleading.

Despite this ruling, the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" effectively mandated the sale's completion. When Lease Sale 261 was finally held in December 2025, it offered over 73 million acres, including the contested whale habitat.29 The sale generated $300 million in high bids, driven in part by the reduced royalty rates.8 The administration celebrated this as a victory for energy security, while conservationists viewed it as a potential extinction event for the Rice’s Whale, arguing that the "mitigation measures" (such as visual observers on ships) are wholly inadequate for detecting whales at night or protecting them from the pervasive acoustic trauma of seismic surveys.21

V. The Arctic Front: Permafrost, Sovereignty, and the Carbon Bomb

While the Gulf of America provides the volume of U.S. production, the Alaskan Arctic represents the strategic frontier. The 2025-2026 period witnessed the full-scale industrialization of the North Slope, centering on the controversial Willow Project and the reopening of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR).

The Willow Project: Engineering in a Thawing World

ConocoPhillips’ Willow Project, located in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A), is the largest new oil project on federal land. Approved in a scaled-back form by the Biden Administration, the Trump Administration’s 2025 policies removed previous infrastructure limitations and accelerated its construction timeline.30

Willow is designed to produce up to 180,000 barrels of oil per day at peak production. Over its 30-year lifespan, it is estimated to generate over 250 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent emissions—roughly equal to the annual emissions of 66 coal-fired power plants.32 This massive carbon footprint has earned it the moniker of a "carbon bomb" among climate scientists.

However, the immediate challenge for Willow is geotechnical. The project requires the construction of hundreds of miles of roads, pipelines, and gravel pads on the tundra. This infrastructure relies on the structural integrity of the permafrost—the permanently frozen soil that underlies the Arctic. But the Arctic is warming at a rate three to four times faster than the global average, causing the permafrost to degrade.33

The Permafrost Feedback Loop:

When permafrost thaws, the ground subsides, causing roads to buckle and pipelines to shift. In 2022, a gas leak at ConocoPhillips’ nearby Alpine field (CD1) was attributed to permafrost thaw induced by the heat of drilling fluids.33 The thaw created a pathway for gas to escape around the well casing.

To combat this, the Willow Project utilizes "passive thermosyphons." These are large, sealed vertical tubes partially buried in the ground, filled with a refrigerant (usually carbon dioxide or ammonia).

  • Mechanism: In winter, the air is colder than the ground. The refrigerant at the bottom of the tube boils (vaporizes) due to the ground heat. The vapor rises to the top (the radiator section above ground), where it cools, condenses back into liquid, and falls back down.

  • Result: This cycle continuously transfers heat from the ground to the air, effectively super-cooling the soil to keep it frozen.34

While ingenious, the reliance on thermosyphons assumes that winter air temperatures will remain low enough to facilitate this heat exchange. As Arctic winters warm, the efficiency of these systems drops, raising the risk of catastrophic infrastructure failure and environmental contamination in this fragile ecosystem.

Rescinding Protections in the NPR-A and ANWR

H.R. 1 mandated five new lease sales in the NPR-A by 2035 and rescinded the 2024 rule that had protected 13 million acres of "Special Areas," including the Teshekpuk Lake Special Area, a critical molting ground for geese and calving ground for the Teshekpuk Caribou Herd.1

Simultaneously, the administration reopened the Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to leasing. The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act had originally mandated leasing in ANWR, but the Biden Administration had suspended the program due to legal deficiencies. The 2025 "Unleashing Alaska’s Extraordinary Resource Potential" executive order directed the expedited completion of a new Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), with the goal of holding a lease sale by late 2026.35

Land Conveyance as Regulatory Bypass

A distinct and sophisticated tactic employed in 2025 was the use of land conveyances to bypass federal environmental roadblocks. In July 2025, the DOI finalized the transfer of 28,000 acres of federal land to the NANA Regional Corporation, an Alaska Native Corporation.36

This land is located along the route of the proposed Ambler Road, a 211-mile industrial access road intended to open up the Ambler Mining District to copper and zinc extraction. The road has faced fierce opposition due to its impact on the Brooks Range wilderness and subsistence hunting. By transferring the land to NANA, the federal government effectively removed a key segment of the road's route from federal jurisdiction (BLM land) to private corporate ownership. This fragmentation simplifies the permitting process, as private land is subject to fewer federal environmental triggers than public land, thereby accelerating the road's development under the banner of "sovereignty" and "economic development".36

VI. The Western Interior: Sage-Grouse and the Golden Triangle

In the intermountain West, the conflict between extraction and conservation centers on the "Sagebrush Sea" of Wyoming and the high desert of Utah.

The Golden Triangle and the Sage-Grouse

The "Golden Triangle," located between Farson, South Pass, and Big Sandy in western Wyoming, is an ecological jewel. It contains the highest density of Greater Sage-Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) on the planet.37 The Sage-Grouse is a landscape species; its health is a proxy for the health of the entire sagebrush ecosystem.

In December 2025, despite significant controversy, the BLM proceeded with an oil and gas lease sale that included parcels within the Golden Triangle. Initially, 264 parcels were deferred, but H.R. 1’s mandate to offer acreage forced the reinstatement of 34 parcels in a "replacement sale" on December 30, 2025.38

Ecological Impact of Drilling:

The primary threat to Sage-Grouse is not just habitat loss, but "functional habitat loss" due to disturbance.

  • Acoustic Interference: Sage-Grouse mate on "leks," open areas where males perform elaborate strutting displays. These displays are acoustically driven; the males inflate air sacs to produce a "plopping" sound that attracts females. Anthropogenic noise from drilling rigs, compressor stations, and traffic can mask these sounds. Research shows that noise levels just 10 dB above ambient levels can cause lek abandonment.40

  • Visual Obstruction: Sage-Grouse evolved in a flat landscape without trees. They have an innate fear of vertical structures, which serve as perches for predators like Golden Eagles and ravens. Drilling rigs, condensate tanks, and power lines act as "techno-ecological traps," driving the birds away from viable habitat simply by their visual presence.41

The December 2025 sale leased over 23,000 acres of this prime habitat. The winning bids were low—some at the minimum of $2.00 per acre—suggesting that while the economic return to the taxpayer was minimal ($17.5 million total), the ecological cost was maximized.42

Hydraulic Fracturing Mechanics and Risk

The development of these leases relies on hydraulic fracturing (fracking) combined with horizontal drilling.

  • Horizontal Drilling: A well is drilled vertically to a "kickoff point" (often 6,000-10,000 feet deep) and then steered 90 degrees to run horizontally through the target formation for 1-2 miles.44

  • Fracking Process:

  • Perforation: Explosive charges are lowered into the horizontal leg to punch holes through the steel casing and cement into the rock.

  • Stimulation: Fluid (water mixed with sand and chemicals) is pumped at extreme pressure (up to 15,000 psi) to fracture the rock.

  • Proppant: The sand grains (proppant) hold the tiny fractures open, allowing oil and gas to flow.45

Groundwater Risk:

The geology of the Wyoming Overthrust Belt is complex, characterized by folding and faulting. The primary risk to groundwater is not usually the fracture itself extending to the aquifer (which is thousands of feet above), but the failure of the well integrity. The "annulus"—the space between the steel pipe and the drilled rock—is filled with cement. If this cement bond is imperfect (a "micro-annulus"), or if the steel casing corrodes, pressurized methane and fracking fluids can migrate upward into freshwater aquifers.47 The expedited six-month review process mandated by H.R. 1 limits the time available for geologists to verify the casing programs and identify subsurface faults, thereby increasing the probability of these containment failures.2

VII. The Battle for Utah: Monuments and Sovereignty

In Utah, the "Great Reallocation" has taken the form of boundary reductions and land transfers.

Shrinking Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante

Following the precedent of 2017, the Trump Administration in 2025 moved to reduce the boundaries of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments. In January 2025, the BLM finalized a new Resource Management Plan (RMP) for Bears Ears that replaced the conservation-focused 2024 plan.5 The new RMP emphasizes "multiple use," reopening vast areas to uranium mining and oil exploration.

This move is a direct rejection of the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition’s management philosophy, which views the landscape as a sacred, indivisible entity. The administration’s leaked plans suggest an 85% reduction in the protected area, similar to the 2017 proclamation, arguing that the Antiquities Act allows presidents to reserve only the "smallest area compatible" with the protection of specific objects, rather than vast landscapes.48

The Transfer of Little Sahara

A new front in the public lands debate opened with the movement to transfer federal lands to state control. Utah’s H.C.R. 11 and H.C.R. 12, introduced in the 2025 legislative session, petitioned for the transfer of the Little Sahara Recreation Area from the BLM to the State of Utah.50

Little Sahara is a 60,000-acre dune field popular with off-roaders. The state argues it can manage the area more efficiently and keep fees local. In August 2025, a pilot transfer of over 600 acres to Utah State Parks was completed.6 However, conservationists view Little Sahara as a "Trojan Horse." H.R. 1 contains provisions that facilitate these transfers if a state can demonstrate an "economic management plan." Critics fear that once the precedent of transferring profitable recreation sites is established, the state will move to acquire energy-rich lands. Unlike the federal government, which is mandated to manage for diverse publics and retention, state trust land mandates often require maximizing revenue, creating a structural incentive to sell the land or lease it for maximum extraction.52

VIII. Economic Analysis: The Balance Sheet of Dominance

The "Energy Dominance" policy is predicated on the economic theory that maximizing supply will lower costs and drive GDP growth.

The Macroeconomic View

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the Heritage Foundation project that H.R. 1 will increase real GDP by approximately 0.5 percent over the 2025-2034 period.54 This growth is driven by the surge in capital investment in the oil and gas sector, stimulated by the immediate expensing of drilling costs and the lower royalty rates.

The BLM’s lease sales in Q1 2025 alone generated $39 million in revenue.56 Proponents argue that the "multiplier effect" of oil and gas jobs—which typically pay higher than average wages—creates robust regional economies in places like West Texas and North Dakota.

The Opportunity Cost

However, this ledger is incomplete without accounting for the "crowding out" of the clean energy sector. By repealing the predictable tax credits of the IRA and introducing supply chain volatility through FEOC rules, H.R. 1 has made renewable energy projects significantly riskier. The estimated cancellation of $522 billion in green investment represents a massive opportunity cost.11 The U.S. is effectively ceding leadership in the high-growth sectors of battery manufacturing and green hydrogen to competitors like China and the EU, in exchange for doubling down on a mature, cyclical commodity industry.

Furthermore, the external costs—the "tragedy of the commons"—are excluded from the GDP figures. The loss of the Sage-Grouse tourism economy, the potential collapse of Gulf fisheries due to seismic blasting, and the long-term climate adaptation costs of the "carbon bombs" in Alaska are liabilities that will be borne by the public, not the lessees.10

IX. Conclusion

The years 2025 and 2026 mark a decisive turning point in the history of the American landscape. The "Great Reallocation" is a systematic transfer of wealth and control: from the ecological future to the industrial present, from the federal public trust to state and private interests, and from a philosophy of conservation to one of unbridled dominance.

Through the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," the administration has engineered a legislative framework that prioritizes the extraction of every available BTU. The biological cost of this policy is measured in the deafening noise of the Gulf of America, the fractured geology of the Golden Triangle, and the thawing soil of the North Slope. While the policy may succeed in its goal of maximizing short-term energy output, it does so by dismantling the legal and physical safeguards that have protected America’s natural heritage for generations. The drills are turning, the seismic guns are firing, and the map of the American West has been redrawn—perhaps permanently.

Table 1: Key Provisions of H.R. 1 vs. Previous Policy

Feature

Biden Administration Policy (Pre-2025)

H.R. 1 / Trump II Policy (2025-2026)

Offshore Leasing

3 sales scheduled (2024-2029)

30 sales mandated in Gulf of America; Cook Inlet reinstated.

Royalty Rates

16.67% (Inflation Reduction Act)

Reduced to 12.5% (Statutory minimum).

Conservation

"Conservation" defined as a FLPMA use

Rescinded; Conservation defined as "non-use".

NEPA Review

Rigorous, often multi-year timeline

6-month statutory deadline; no deferrals allowed.

Renewables

10-year extension of Tax Credits (ITC/PTC)

Phased out starting 2032; FEOC restrictions added.

Arctic (ANWR)

Leasing suspended pending review

Leasing expedited; Sales mandated by 2026.

Monuments

Bears Ears / Grand Staircase expanded

Boundaries reduced; Management plans favor extraction.

Works cited

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  2. Interior Streamlines Oil and Gas Leasing to Advance Energy Independence and Economic Growth | U.S. Department of the Interior - DOI.gov, accessed January 11, 2026, https://www.doi.gov/pressreleases/interior-streamlines-oil-and-gas-leasing-advance-energy-independence-and-economic

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  4. H.R.1 - 119th Congress (2025-2026): An act to provide for reconciliation pursuant to title II of H. Con. Res. 14. | Congress.gov | Library of Congress, accessed January 11, 2026, https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/1/summary/00

  5. Utah - Bears Ears National Monument Management, accessed January 11, 2026, https://www.blm.gov/programs/national-conservation-lands/utah/bears-ears-national-monument

  6. BLM transfers over 600 public acres to Utah Division of State Parks, accessed January 11, 2026, https://stateparks.utah.gov/2025/08/19/blm-transfers-over-600-public-acres-to-utah-division-of-state-parks/

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  8. Trump Administration Holds First Gulf of America Offshore Oil and Gas Lease Sale Since 2023 | Insights | Holland & Knight, accessed January 11, 2026, https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2025/12/trump-administration-holds-first-gulf-of-america-offshore-oil-gas

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  12. Fewer Jobs and Higher Energy Bills: What the One Big Beautiful Bill Act Means for Illinois, accessed January 11, 2026, https://ler.illinois.edu/2025/08/11/hr1impacts/

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