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US Interior Dept. weakens protection for sage-grouse to allow more oil and minerals development

US Interior Dept. weakens protection for sage-grouse to allow more oil and minerals development
US Interior Dept. weakens protection for sage-grouse to allow more oil and minerals development

The Trump administration rolled back protections on Monday for the greater Sage-grouse in 8 western states of?U.S. The Trump administration has opened up more federal land for energy and mineral development.

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) said that proposed changes would allow more development space than was allowed in 2015 plans while still protecting some important habitats for endangered birds across 65 million acres of sagebrush land.

The agency said that the changes made to sage grouse protections are in accordance with two executive orders signed by Donald Trump earlier this year, which were intended to unleash U.S. production of energy and energy independence.

Bill Groffy, Acting Director of the Bureau of Land Management, said: "We're strengthening American energy security while ensuring that the sage grouse continues its flourishing."

In early 2010, the Endangered Species Act was amended to include greater sage grouse as a protected species. This was due to the rapid decline of the population.

The Trump proposal would eliminate an annual warning system which aimed to flag declining populations of the ground-dwelling birds, as well as removing protections from more than 4 million acres sage grouse habitat in Utah.

Idaho, Montana and North and South Dakota are also affected, as well as Nevada, Wyoming and California.

Environmentalists have warned that opening up more federal land for energy extraction will push bird species into extinction, and harm other species.

Randi Spivak is the public lands director for the Center for Biological Diversity. She said that Trump's reckless actions would speed up the extinction rate of the greater sage grouse if he allowed unrestricted fossil fuel extraction on tens and millions of acres of federal lands.

(source: Reuters)