This Week at Interior March 28, 2025

Transcript:

This Week at Interior

President Trump's Cabinet met this week at the White House to discuss savings garnered by the cancellation of contracts, part of the effort to eliminate wasteful federal government spending through the Department of Government Efficiency. Secretary Burgum outlined savings to the tune of $830 million gained with the cancellation of a contract to perform surveys, the product of which he compared to the work of a child.  

The surveys came back, and it was... the survey was like an eight and half by eleven sheets of paper with ten questions that anyone's child in junior high could have put together, or AI could have done for free. $830 million, so that's one that we've stopped.

Secretary Burgum was a guest this week on CNBC's Squawk Box, talking about a range of issues from critical minerals to affordable housing on underutilized Federal Lands suitable for residential development. He also addressed last week's move to unlock Alaska's vast energy potential, and renewed efforts to tap huge reserves of oil and natural gas in America's largest state.  

This is in an important project for national security and President Trump has opened all that up again in the last week, and of course a lot of that is on Interior land. We've been supporting President Trump's direction, in that direction...in a meeting with the mayor of the North Slope, I mean this is an area that's you know, one and half times almost the size of Montana. There's 11,000 Alaska Natives that live up there, they want to have the development. Their lifespan went up a 15 years increase, once we had the first road that came into that area after the original Alaska oil development and so there's just a tremendous resource there that we need to use for national security purposes and for the benefit and economic development of the people that live there that want it.  

Secretary Burgum says under President Trump's leadership, Interior is driving historic growth in offshore oil and gas production, reinforcing the United States’ position as a global energy leader. He says industry projections indicate offshore production could surpass 2 million barrels per day by 2025-2026, marking an all-time high for the U.S and that...

The Energy Dominance strategy unleashed unprecedented investment in American energy. By cutting red tape, streamlining permitting, and ensuring regulatory certainty, we are unlocking the full potential of our offshore resources while maintaining the highest safety standards. These efforts continue to deliver affordable energy for American families and businesses.  

Interior this week announced the Department generated over $39 million in total receipts from oil and gas lease sales held in the first quarter of 2025 – underscoring Interior's continued commitment to responsible energy development on public lands and American Energy Dominance.  These revenues reflect an ongoing focus on unleashing domestic energy production in line with Trump administration policies, which include job growth, and reducing reliance on foreign resources through efficient, streamlined permitting and leasing processes.  

Interior this week announced the disbursement of nearly $354 million in energy revenues to the four Gulf of America oil- and gas-producing states: Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. The Gulf of America is a critical resource in ensuring that America can become Energy Dominant and meet demands through domestic sources. On average, 58 percent of oil production on federal lands and waters comes from the Gulf of America.    

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is reopening the public comment period for a proposed rule to list the monarch butterfly as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. Monarchs in the Americas range from Canada to Mexico, but scientists say their numbers have fallen by 80% in the eastern United States, and by as much as 95% in the west. The comment period will be reopened until May 19 to give all interested parties an additional opportunity to comment on the proposed rule.

It's been a long road back for areas devastated nearly eight years ago by Hurricane Irma, but thanks to President Trump’s Great American Outdoors Act, or GAOA, an iconic building at Virgin Islands National Park is well on its way. The centuries-old Cinnamon Bay Danish Warehouse once lay in ruins after the storm. With GAOA funding crews from the Historic Preservation Training Center have set about stabilizing the structure's foundations and restoring its 17th Century character, just one example of the National Park Service's mission to ensure the continued preservation of our national heritage for generations to come.

And our social media Picture of the Week, a little motherly love at Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge in Hawai'i, where this Hawaiian goose, or nēnē, keeps its little chick close. Once on the brink of extinction due to over-hunting, habitat destruction, and non-native predators, the stunning nēnē has made a remarkable comeback. Thanks to successful reintroduction efforts in the 1980s and 1990s, small populations were reestablished on Kaua‘i. Now the statewide population has steadily grown... the nēnē, while still threatened, is no longer listed as endangered.  

Make sure you follow us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and X!

That's This Week at Interior! 

This Week: Secretary Burgum outlines savings to the tune of $830 million at a White House meeting of President Trump's Cabinet; on CNBC's Squawk Box,Secretary Burgum talks about last week's move to unlock Alaska's vast energy potential; Secretary Burgum explains how Interior is driving historic growth in offshore oil and gas production under President Trump's leadership; Interior announces that the Department generated over $39 million in total receipts from oil and gas lease sales held in the first quarter of 2025; disbursements from Interior mean nearly $354 million in energy revenues is on the way to the four Gulf of America oil-and gas-producing states; the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is reopening the public comment period for a proposed rule to list the monarch butterfly as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act; thanks to President Trump’s Great American Outdoors Act an iconic building at Virgin Islands National Park is well on its way to restoration; and it's a fine-feathered image of motherly love in our social media Picture of the Week!

  • Video
    04/11/2025

    This Week at Interior April 11, 2025

    Video

    Transcript:

    (MUSIC BEGINS)


    This Week at Interior

    President Trump this week signed Executive Orders aimed at achieving the Administration's goal of American Energy Dominance with a renewed focus on coal. One of the orders directs Interior to identify untapped coal resources on federal lands, while removing barriers to mining and leasing.

    The value of untapped coal in our country is one hundred times greater than the value of all the gold at Fort Knox, and we're going to unleash it and make America rich and powerful again.

    To advance the President Trump's order, Interior will implement a series of policy moves and regulatory reforms to position coal as a cornerstone of the nation’s energy strategy by ensuring federally managed lands remain open and accessible for responsible energy development. Secretary Burgum likened the actions to creating a new Golden Age of "Mine, Baby, Mine," saying that  

    Interior is unlocking America’s full potential in energy dominance and economic development to make life more affordable for every American family while showing the world the power of America’s natural resources and innovation.  

    Among the actions are ending the moratorium on federal coal leasing, reopening federal lands in Montana and Wyoming to coal leasing, removing regulatory burdens for coal mines, and providing royalty rate relief.  

    Interior this week announced the disbursement of more than $13 million in grants to support the reclamation of abandoned mine lands, furthering the Trump administration’s commitment to American Energy Dominance, environmental stewardship and economic renewal in coal communities. The funding is administered through the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, and it will support job creation and economic revitalization efforts in North Dakota, Tennessee and Texas.  

    Interior this week announced the release of updated oil and gas reserve estimates for the Gulf of America's Outer Continental Shelf. The new data and analysis over the last couple of years reveal an additional 1.3 billion barrels of oil equivalent since 2021, bringing the total reserve estimate to 7.04 billion barrels of oil equivalent. That figure includes 5.77 billion barrels of oil and 7.15 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Earlier this year, the Trump administration announced plans to significantly increase oil and gas leasing on the Outer Continental Shelf, and just last week Secretary Burgum directed the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to hold the first Gulf of America oil and gas lease sale since its renaming in February.

    Secretary Burgum held his first All Hands meeting this week at Interior's historic Yates Auditorium. The Secretary saluted the notable accomplishments the Department has achieved in making the transition from the previous administration, and expanded on his vision that innovation, rather than regulation, is the cornerstone of American prosperity.

    The thing that has led our country for 250 years is innovation, doesn't matter whether it's the Agricultural Revolution, the Industrial Revolution our ability to innovate in a way that allowed us to win World War One and World War II and lead the world and become the world leader, all of it was innovation based, and we have to get back to those roots. That's how we win. That's how America wins in this world, that's how we win again for our children and our children's children, is we win with innovation.

    U.S. Geological Survey crews were deployed late last week and this week to monitor flood impacts after storms dumped heavy rain across portions of the southeast and Midwest. Crews are still hard at work gathering flood measurements in Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois and Ohio, as well as West Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee and Mississippi, where as much as ten inches of rain fell causing massive flooding. The gages provide information for the National Weather Service to predict when dangerous flooding might occur and allow for warnings to vulnerable residents, as flood crests will continue into early May.

    And our social media Picture of the Week, California's Battery Point Lighthouse. Perched on California's rugged northern coast, this historic beacon stands among the rocky outcrops of the California Coastal National Monument and has guided mariners since its first lighting in 1856.

    Make sure you follow us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and X! That's This Week at Interior!


    (MUSIC ENDS)

     

    News and headlines from Interior April 11, 2025

    Read more