10/30/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/30/2025 18:30
        Washington, D.C. -  Today, Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi joined over 100 lawmakers in demanding(link is external) President Trump and Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum immediately cease any plans to open new offshore oil and gas leases(link is external) in U.S. federal waters off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, in the Arctic Ocean and northern Bering Sea off of Alaska, and in the Eastern Gulf. The lawmakers warned that opening these untouched coastlines to new offshore drilling would devastate coastal economies, jeopardize our national security, ravage coastal ecosystems, and put millions of Americans' health and safety at risk, hurting people across the political spectrum.
        
        By reversing long-standing legal protections for vulnerable coastal waters, new offshore leases would cause significant environmental damage to communities already reeling from natural disasters and recent oil spills. Oil spills not only cause irreparable environmental damage, but also suppress the value of coastal homes, harm tourism economies, and weaken coastal infrastructure. Already, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is forced to respond to over 150 oil and chemical spills each year. One disastrous spill can cost taxpayers billions in lost revenue, cleanup costs, and ecosystem restoration.
        
        These threats of expanded oil drilling come as the Administration already dismantled(link is external) NOAA's oil spill prevention and response programs, as almost 30 percent of the team in charge of addressing oil spills has been laid off or took early retirement. The Emergency Response Division team and the oil spill program are slated to lose half their funding(link is external) from the Administration's proposed FY 2026 budget.
        
        "This is a matter of national consequence for coastal communities across the country, regardless of political affiliation. It puts our economies, national security, and our most vulnerable ecosystems at severe risk," wrote the lawmakers. "… Expanded oil and gas leasing poses risks to the health and livelihoods of our constituents, jeopardizes our tourism, fishing, and recreation economies, and threatens the marine life that inhabits our coastlines."
        
        "The United States already leads the world in oil and gas production. The industry currently holds more than 2,000 offshore leases covering over 12 million acres of federal waters - yet fewer than 500 of those leases are actively producing oil and gas," continued the lawmakers. "There is no justification for opening vast swaths of our oceans to leasing when existing leases remain largely unused, while imposing mounting environmental and economic costs on coastal communities."
        
        Additionally, the Department of Defense (DOD) previously warned that oil and gas leases in portions of the Eastern Gulf would impact areas critical to our military readiness, including for military training and testing opportunities and assets. DOD has also signaled that parts of the Mid-Atlantic and South Atlantic Planning Areas are "not compatible with oil and gas activities and infrastructure."
        
        The lawmakers condemned the potential expansion of offshore drilling while the Administration simultaneously curtails offshore wind and clean energy development. This year, the Trump Administration has withdrawn(link is external) all outer continental offshore wind leases, rescinded all designated Wind Energy Areas(link is external), and eliminated $679 million(link is external) in offshore-wind-related port infrastructure funding, including over $426 million for Humboldt Bay offshore wind infrastructure.
        
        Specifically, the lawmakers demanded that President Trump and Secretary Burgum:
      
"Our coastal communities, fishermen, small business owners, Tribal Nations, tourism operators, and families cannot be sacrificed in the name of short-term drilling booms," concluded the lawmakers. "Opening new offshore lease areas while cancelling clean energy progress is potentially illegal, a failure of leadership, and a dereliction of the public trust."
The full text of the letter can be found HERE.(link is external)