
-
World No. 1 Scheffler shares lead at PGA Travelers Championship
-
Messi's 'winning spirit' surprising: Inter Miami's Mascherano
-
US immigration agents barred from LA Dodgers' stadium: team
-
SpaceX Starship explodes on Texas launch pad
-
Messi strikes as Inter Miami stun Porto at Club World Cup
-
US immigration agents barred from LA baseball stadium: team
-
Jorginho gunning for old side Chelsea with Flamengo at Club World Cup
-
Real Madrid star Mbappe released from hospital
-
World No.1 Sinner shocked in Halle second round by Bublik
-
Chelsea boss Maresca 'trusts' Mudryk after doping charge
-
Israel welcomes 'all help' in striking Iran, Trump to decide 'within two weeks'
-
Zverev holds off Sonego to reach Halle quarter-finals
-
Palmeiras ease past Al Ahly in Club World Cup
-
Alcaraz survives scare to reach Queen's quarter-finals
-
Stokes adamant Archer 'desperate' for England return
-
Palmeiras v Al Ahly Club World Cup clash suspended for weather
-
French Open winner Gauff falls at first hurdle on Berlin grass
-
Cleanup begins as Hurricane Erick moves on from Mexican coast
-
Restoration rejuvenates iconic Gaudi house in Barcelona
-
France softens restrictions for Telegram founder Durov
-
Trump 'Golden Dome' plan tricky and expensive: experts
-
French state leads capital increase for satellite operator Eutelsat
-
Russia steps out from shadows in Africa with state paramilitary
-
Trawlerman and Buick move into top gear to land Ascot Gold Cup
-
France softens restrictions for Telegram founder Durov: judicial source
-
Trump extends deadline for TikTok sale by 90 days
-
Indonesia leader touts growing Russia ties after talks with Putin
-
Czech champion Kvitova calls time on tennis career
-
Test series win in England bigger prize than IPL, says India captain Gill
-
Sabalenka back to winning ways in Berlin
-
Mahuchikh, Holloway headline Paris Diamond League
-
How did life survive 'Snowball Earth'? In ponds, study suggests
-
Russell signs new deal at Premiership champions Bath
-
2,000-year-old Roman wall paintings unearthed in London
-
Tourists, fishermen hunker as Hurricane Erick pounds Mexican coast
-
How Trumponomics has shaken global markets
-
Sabalenka back to winnings ways in Berlin
-
Real Madrid star Mbappe hospitalised with stomach bug
-
Dropping Pope for India Test would have been 'remarkable', says England's Stokes
-
Climate change could double summer rainfall in the Alps: study
-
If Iran's Khamenei falls, what would replace him?
-
India's Bumrah aiming for three Tests out of five against England
-
Mutilation ban and microchips: EU lawmakers approve cat and dog welfare rules
-
Israel minister says Iran leader 'can no longer exist' after hospital hit
-
Thai PM clings on as crisis threatens to topple government
-
Govts scramble to evacuate citizens from Israel and Iran
-
Floods expected after Hurricane Erick makes landfall in western Mexico
-
Russia warns US against 'military intervention' in Iran-Israel war
-
Budapest mayor defies police ban on Pride march
-
Air India says plane 'well-maintained' before crash

To drill or not to drill: Biden to make decision on Alaska oil project
US President Joe Biden is poised to decide whether to pull the plug on a massive oil drilling project on Alaska's North Slope or allow it to go ahead.
With the decision imminent, environmentalists have ramped up pressure on the White House, urging Biden to live up to the climate change pledges he made during his campaign.
During the 2020 presidential race, the Democratic candidate vowed not to approve any new leases for oil and gas projects on federal lands.
But Biden has found himself stuck in the middle of a years-long battle over the so-called Willow Project, a plan by US energy giant ConocoPhillips to drill for oil in the federally-owned National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska's pristine western Arctic.
The Trump administration approved the Willow Project at the tail end of the former president's term but it was blocked by a judge for further review.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), in an environmental impact analysis in February, approved three drilling sites while striking down one and deferring consideration of another.
ConocoPhillips welcomed the BLM's assessment, saying it can "provide a viable path forward for development of our leasehold."
The Interior Department, which oversees the BLM, said, however, it has "substantial concerns" about the project "including direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions and impacts to wildlife and Alaska Native subsistence."
Biden has described global warming as an existential threat and promoted the development of renewable energy sources.
Temperatures in Alaska have been rising faster than in other regions of the planet and environmental groups have warned that the oil extraction project would make things worse.
The Willow Project will add more than 250 million metric tons of carbon emissions to the atmosphere over the next 30 years, the Sierra Club said, equivalent to the annual emissions of 66 coal plants.
Greenpeace described it as a "carbon bomb."
A petition on Change.org seeking to halt the project has garnered more than three million signatures and a #StopWillow campaign on TikTok has drawn 150 million views.
- 180,000 barrels of oil per day -
Backers of the Willow Project defend it as a source of several thousand jobs and a contributor to US energy independence with production of 180,000 barrels of oil per day at its peak or some 576 million barrels over 30 years.
Alaska's two Republican senators and the state's sole member of the House, Mary Peltola, a native Alaskan and a Democrat, met with Biden last week to urge him to approve the project.
"We hope the President will listen to the voices of indigenous Alaskans who live on the North Slope, the voices of labor leaders and union workers who are ready to help build Alaska's economy (and) listen to the voices of national security officials underscoring the importance of Willow for American energy security," they said.
Peltola, in an opinion piece published in The Hill, said Alaskans "aren't blind to the impacts of climate change" but the Willow Project can serve as a bridge as the country transitions away from fossil fuels and towards renewable energy sources.
"At the same time, we can reduce America's dependence on foreign sources of oil -- which makes us all safer in a world that has grown more unpredictable after Russia invaded Ukraine," Peltola said.
Biden has pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 compared with 2005 with the goal of achieving a net zero emissions economy by no later than 2050.
S.AbuJamous--SF-PST