Congress Should Provide Funding for the Bureau of Land Management (BLM)

Congress Should Provide Funding for the Bureau of Land Management (BLM)


Congress should‌ fund the BLM (no, not that one)

A MEMORABLE scene⁣ in season one of‌ HBO’s hit series “The White Lotus” shows Tanya McQuoid ⁢(Jennifer Coolidge) asking her date how he got⁢ involved with the BLM, and why he decided to devote his life to activism. Greg Hunt (Jon Gries) is bewildered. Tanya, like many ⁤Americans, assumes that the initials stand for Black Lives‌ Matter, an anti-racism group. “Black Lives Matter? I’m not ‍involved in that,”​ he replies. Now it is Tanya’s turn for bewilderment. Finally, Greg reveals that he works⁢ for a distinctly different BLM: America’s Bureau ‍of Land‍ Management.

The Bureau ⁣of Land Management (the BLM from here on) is not one of America’s better-known federal agencies. It is just one of 11 bureaus within the Department of⁣ the Interior, and is responsible for managing 10% of America’s lands, ‌or more than 245m acres, ‌mostly in the ⁣western states. It issues permits for​ development on the country’s public lands. For a long time, that meant approving‍ oil ⁣and gas drilling.

But‍ under President Joe Biden, it increasingly means granting ⁣permits for renewable-energy ⁢projects. The Biden administration aims to approve at least 25 gigawatts of solar, ⁤wind⁢ or ‌geothermal energy on federal lands by 2025, and so the BLM finds itself‍ at‌ the very centre of America’s ‌clean-energy transition. But the⁢ bureau will struggle to thrive in the ‍limelight. When asked about the state of the BLM, current and​ former staffers describe‍ an underfunded agency tormented by an increasingly difficult mission and hobbled by staffing shortages.

2023-05-18 07:47:35
Source from www.economist.com

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