MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter, in which Plaintiffs seek review of the United States Bureau of Land Management’s approval of two quarterly oil and gas lease sales on April 16, 2008 and July 16, 2008, comes before the Court on Amigos Bravos’ Opening Brief on the Merits. (Docs. 80.) In their Responses, Defendants seek dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims for lack of standing. (Docs. 91 & 92.) Having considered the parties’ submissions, the relevant case law, and otherwise being fully informed, the Court concludes Plaintiffs lack standing and dismisses all claims raised in Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint. (Doc. 21, Case No. 6:09-cv-00037-RB-LFG.)
I. BACKGROUND
This civil action arises out of a dispute over whether the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM) fully considered the issue of climate change, global warming, and greenhouse gases (GHGs) when it approved two quarterly oil and gas lease sales on April 16, 2008 and July 16, 2008. Several citizen environmental groups, including many of the Plaintiffs in this action, filed protests with BLM, contesting the agency’s approval of the lease sales. (Doc. 80 at 14 & 16; APR 661-715; JUL 125-198.) The environmental groups’ protests to the April and July lease sales were subsequently denied by BLM. (APR 95-120; JUL 62-93.)
Having exhausted their administrative remedies, six citizen environmental groups (collectively referred to herein as Amigos Bravos or Plaintiffs) filed a Complaint in the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico on January 14, 2009. (Doc. 1.) The Plaintiffs filed a First Amended Complaint on May 8, 2009. (Doc. 21.) In this action (the Climate
A separate suit (Case No. 6:09-cv-00414-RB-LFG) challenging the same April 2008 and July 2008 lease sales, in addition to an October 2008 lease sale, was filed by three citizen environmental groups on April 29, 2009. This second suit (the Ozone Action) challenges BLM’s approval of the leases on the basis that the agency failed to properly consider the threat of ozone air pollution resulting from increased oil and gas development. In the interests of judicial efficiency and to avoid undue delay, confusion, or prejudice, this second suit was consоlidated with the present action under Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(a) on September 10, 2009. (Docs. 50 & 57.) This Memorandum Opinion and Order addresses only the parties’ arguments in the Climate Change Action. (Docs. 80, 91, 92 & 93.) Specifically, the Court considers whether Plaintiffs have standing.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Three Immutable Elements of Standing
As courts of limited jurisdiction, federal courts may only adjudicate those eases that the United States Constitution and Congress have granted them authority to hear.
See
U.S. Const. Art. III;
Morris v. City of Hobart,
First, the plaintiff must have suffered an injury in fact — an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical. Second, there must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of — the injury has to be fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant, and not the result of the independent action of some third party not before the court. Third, it must be likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.
Defenders of Wildlife,
B. Citizen Environmental Groups’ Members Must Have Standing to Sue
It is the plaintiff, the “party invоking federal jurisdiction,” who bears the burden to prove standing.
Id.
at 561,
[A]n association has standing to bring suit on behalf of its members when: (a) its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it seeks to protect [through the action] are germane to the organization’s purpose; and (c) neither the claim nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit.
Hunt v. Wash. State Apple Adver. Comm’n,
C. Relaxed Standing Requirement for Procedural Rights Violations
Plaintiffs argue that they are entitled to a relaxed standing analysis because they assert procedural violations by BLM in approving the contested oil and gas leases. (Doc. 93 at 10-13.) The Supreme Court and the Tenth Circuit have concluded that where a plaintiff is asserting his procedural rights under NEPA the normal requirements for the redressability element of standing are relaxed.
1
Mass. v. EPA,
Nevertheless, “the requirement of injury in fact is a hard floor of Article III jurisdiction that cannot be removed by statute.”
Summers v. Earth Island Inst.,
[D]eprivation of a procedural right without some concrete interest that is affected by the deprivation — a procedural right in vacuo — is insufficient to create Article III standing. Only a person who has been accorded a procedural right toprotect his concrete interests can assert that right without meeting all the normal standards for redressability and immediacy.
Summers,
D. Doctrine of Parens Patriae
Finally, standing may also be relaxed where a State is suing in its capacity as a quasi-sovereign to protect its interests and those of its citizenry from air pollution, global warming, or other environmental threats that endanger the public’s health or welfare. This is so because “the State has an interest independent of and behind the titles of its citizens, in all the earth and air within its domain.”
Georgia v. Tennessee Copper Co.,
III. ANALYSIS
Plaintiffs claim that their members have been injured because the BLM did not properly consider the impact that greenhouse gases emitted thrоugh oil and gas development would have on climate change when it approved the sale of 92 oil and gas leases in New Mexico; therefore, Plaintiffs assert that BLM’s actions violated NEPA, FLPMA, MLA, and APA. Before the Court can address the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims, however, it must determine whether they have standing. “This requirement assures that ‘there is a real need to exercise the power of judicial review in order to protect the interests of the complaining party....’”
Summers,
A. Defendants Were Provided Adequate Notice of Plaintiffs’ Asserted Grounds for Standing in Amigos Bravos’ Opening Brief on the Merits
Federal Defendants argue in their Response to Amigos Bravos’ Opening Brief on the Merits that “[b]y failing to meaningfully address standing in their opening brief, Plaintiffs have left [them] to speculate as to the arguments that Plaintiffs may make in their reply brief as to issues on which Plaintiffs bear the burden of proof’; accordingly, immediate dismissal of the case for lack of standing is appropriate. (Doc. 92 at 12-13.) In other words, Federal Defendants claim that because Plaintiffs failed to meaningfully address
In a district court’s review of agency action, it is the plaintiff who carries the burden of production.
Citizens Against Ruining the Env’t v. EPA,
In Amigos Bravos’ Opening Brief, Plaintiffs simply indicаte that “Amigos Bravos has standing to bring this ease.” (Doc. 80 at 13 n. 1.) Plaintiffs then cite to the Declarations of Shirley McNall, Don Schreiber, Taylor Streit, Brian Shields, Gwen Lachelt, and Mike Eisenfeld (members of plaintiff environmental groups Amigos Bravos, Natural Resources Defense Council, San Juan Citizens Alliance, and Earthworks Oil and Gas Accountability Project), which were attached to Amigos Bravos’ Opening Brief as Exhibits 1-6. (Docs. 80-1, 80-2, 80-3, 80-4, 80-5, 80-6.) In the Declarations, the members allege that they have been and will be harmed by climate change occasioned by the release of GHGs from oil and gas wells on BLM land in New Mexico. The members assert that the GHG emissions resulting from BLM’s approval of the oil and gas leases will contribute to climate change, causing earlier winter snow melt, shorter spring runoffs, more intense storms, more silt in the rivers, decreased water quality, longer and more severe droughts, increased risk of forest fires, higher concentrations of pollutants in rivers and lakes, changes to aquatic habitats, reduced trout habitat, reduction or displacement of native aquatic and riparian species, increased stresses on wildlife, declines in both the amount and diversity of wildlife, declines in deеr populations and buck size, increased tree mortality due to beetle infestation, degradation of cultural resources, and negative public health impacts. Accordingly, Declarants allege that they have been harmed by BLM’s decision to grant the leases because climate change impacts their present and future ability to use and enjoy New Mexico’s federal public lands and/or to earn a living.
In the case at hand, Plaintiffs carry the “burden of production on standing,” and are therefore required to “support each element of [their] claim by affidavit or other evidence.”
Citizens Against Ruining the Env’t,
B. Plaintiffs Failed to Demonstrate an Injury-in-Fact
The first requirement of standing is that Plaintiffs demonstrate their members suffered an injury-in-fact “which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
Defenders of Wildlife,
In determining whether Plaintiffs suffered an injury-in-fact, the Court must first look at whether BLM’s alleged uninformed decisionmaking led to an increased risk of environmental harm that was “actual, threatened, or imminent, not merely conjectural or hypothetical.”
Id.
at 449. In
Mass. v. EPA,
In the case at hand, Plaintiffs allege that climate change will have a negative impact on the New Mexico climate and therefore impinge upon their members’ ability to live, recreate, and earn a living. Declarants assert that climate change will lead to, among other harms, less water, decreased biodiversity, siltier rivers, and more forest fires; yet, Plaintiffs present no scientific evidence or formal, recorded
Declarants paint a bleak picture of the future of New Mexico’s environment, but their allegations are not sufficiently reliable or trustworthy to establish injury-in-fact.
See Murray v. City of Sapulpa,
Still, Plaintiffs argue that they have demonstrated injury-in-fact because the Declarations demonstrate “the requisite ‘reasonable concerns’ and ‘reasonable prоbability’ that BLM’s procedural violations risk concrete interests.” (Doc. 93 at 10.) Plaintiffs cite to Exhibit 4, ¶¶ 17-26 and Exhibit 6, ¶¶4-7,
3
arguing that the Declarants’ “review of reports regarding effects of climate change led to reasonable concerns.” (Doc. 93 at 10, n. 3.). Citing to
Citizens for Better Forestry v. U.S. Dept. of Agric.,
Furthermore, while there may be a generally accepted scientific consensus with regard to global climate change,
Mass. v. EPA,
Additionally, even if the Court were to consider the scientific reports cited in the Declarations — despite the fact that they represent raw conjecture and inadmissible hearsay,
see Murray,
In sum, Declarants failed to demonstrate that BLM’s alleged failure to follow proper procedure “created an increased risk of actual, threatened, or imminent environmental harm.”
Comm. to Save the Rio Hondo,
Next, in addition to demonstrating that BLM’s failure to follow proper procedure resulted in “an increased risk of actual, threatened, or imminent environmental harm,” Plaintiffs must establish “that the increased risk of environmental harm injures its concrete interests by demonstrating either its geographical nexus to, or actual use of the site of the agency action.”
Comm, to Save the Rio Hondo,
One might analogize Plaintiffs’ alleged injuries in the case at hand to claims brought by plaintiffs living downstream from a polluter who discharges hazardous waste into a stream: those living downstream have standing if they can demonstrate concrete and particularized injuries to their economic, recreational, or aesthetic interests in the stream.
Public Interest Research Group of New Jersey, Inc. v. Powell Duffryn Terminals, Inc.,
In the case at hand, however, Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate a concrete and particularized interest in the land at issue: Plaintiffs have not shown that their members use the BLM land subject to the oil and gas leases, or that they have some other geographical nexus to the land. The Declarants generally allege that they recreate on BLM lands in New Mexico or live in the vicinity of BLM land where there are oil and gas wells; however, none of the Declarants specifically identify that they use any of the lands, or the near vicinity, where BLM approved the oil and gas leases.
5
In
Lujan v. Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n,
[W]hether one of respondent’s members has been, or is threatened to be, “adversely affected or aggrieved” by Government action ... is assuredly not satisfied by averments which stаte only that one of respondent’s members uses unspecified portions of an immense tract of territory, on some portions of which mining activity has occurred or probably will occur by virtue of the governmental action. It will not do to “presume” the missing facts because without them the affidavits would not establish the injury that they generally allege.
Similarly, here, Declarants generally allege that they recreate on public lands
With climate change, the Court must enforce some limits on what constitutes an injury-in-fact; otherwise, it would be overwhelmed by a flood of lawsuits asserting generalized grievances against polluters large and small. Article Ill’s standing requirement was designed to prevent just this sort of occurrence, limiting disputes to those “which are appropriately resolved through the judicial prоcess,” as opposed to legislative or executive action.
Whitmore v. Arkansas,
“The purpose of the injury-in-fact requirement of Article III is to ensure only those having a direct stake in the outcome, and not those having abstract concerns, may access the courts.”
Comm. to Save the Rio Hondo,
We have consistently held that a plaintiff raising only a generally available grievance about government — claiming only harm to his and every citizen’s interest in proper application of the Constitution and laws, and seeking reliefthat no more directly and tangibly benefits him than it does the public at large — does not state an Article III case or controversy.
Defenders of Wildlife,
C. Plaintiffs Failed to Demonstrate Causation
Even assuming, arguendo, that Plaintiffs could establish an injury-in-fact, there is still the issue of causation, the second prong of Article Ill’s standing test. Federal Defendants argue that the amount of GHGs conceivably attributable to BLM’s alleged failure to follow proper procedure in the approval of the oil and gas leases is “minuscule,” and therefore, Plaintiffs cannot establish causation based on these emissions. (Doc. 92 at 20-24.) Furthermore, Federal Defendants argue that if there were no such limitations, “standing would exist for any person living anywhere in the world (who could presumably cite to at least some incremental potential effect of climate change that affects them) to bring a challenge under the APA to virtually any federal agency action on the basis of any incremental contribution to climate change from even a minimal release of GHGs.” (Doc. 92 at 22.) Defendant IPANM argues that the causal chain that Plaintiffs must prove in order to show causation is too attenuated — “they must prove that a particular lessee will decide to develop a lease, that development of that lease will emit GHGs, those GHGs will cause global warming, and that global warming will cause the injuries alleged by Plaintiffs” — therefore, Plaintiffs cannot show that the alleged injury is fairly traceable to BLM’s approval of the leases. (Doc. 91 at 27-29.) Plaintiffs counter that the GHG emissions are hardly “tentative,” nor “minuscule,” and that in
Mass. v. EPA
To satisfy the causation prong of standing, Plaintiffs’ alleged injuries must be “fairly traceable” to the Defendants’ actions.
Defenders of Wildlife,
A similar contribution theory of causation has been applied in cases brought under the Clean Water Act. Under this approach, it is not necessary that plaintiffs show with absolute scientific certainty that a particular defendant’s pollution, and its pollution alone, was responsible for their injuries.
Powell Duffryn,
[T]his likelihood may be established by showing that a defendant has (1) discharged some pollutant in concentrations greater than allowed by its permit (2) into a waterway in which the plaintiffs have an interest that is or may be adversely affected by the pollutant and that (3) this pollutant causes or contributes to the kinds of injuries alleged by the plaintiffs.
Powell Duffryn,
Yet, in order for the plaintiffs’ injuries to be “fairly traceable” to a particular defendant’s actions, the plaintiffs cannot be “so far downstream that their injuries cannot be fairly traced to that defendant.”
Gaston Copper,
Returning to the river analogy, there may be hundreds or even thousands of property owners along a river, but generally only a few of them are discharging the target pollutant. In such a case, a court can reasonably conclude that there is “a substantial likelihood that defendant’s conduct caused plaintiffs harm.”
Powell Duffryn,
In the case of global warming, there are literally hundreds of milliоns, if not billions, of sources of GHGs spewing pollutants into the air and contributing to climate change. Some of these sources are naturally occurring (i.e., ruminants or volcanoes), some local (as close as the Court’s lawnmower), and some far away (a coal-fired power plant on the other side of the globe). Also, some sources are very minor contributors, while others are almost incomprehensible in scale: in
Mass. v. EPA,
With GHGs, every inhabitant of our planet is within the “zone of discharge”; consequently, the issue of geographical proximity to the source of pollution may not be a proper measure of the likelihood of onе’s injury having been caused by a particular polluter. The alternative adopted by the Supreme Court appears to be to look at the quantity of GHG emissions produced by a polluter and consider whether the polluter can be said to have made a meaningful contribution to global GHG levels. Where exactly the Court should draw this line is not clear, but a line must be drawn; otherwise, anyone could be liable for the most innocuous of acts — driving to work, watching the television, or flipping on a light — all of which may contribute to global warming. Here, the potential 254,730 metric tons of GHGs per year that might result from the approval of the 92 oil and gas leases will not make a particularly meaningful contribution to global emissions. It stretches credibility to believe that the injuries Plaintiffs’ members complain of — less snowpack in winter, earlier runoffs in spring, reduced biodiversity, higher temperatures, decreased availability of water, and siltier rivers — can be said to be fairly traceable to this relatively small amount of GHG emissions. As the Supreme Court stated in
Allen v. Wright,
D. Plaintiffs Can Likely Meet the Relaxed Redressability Standard
The final prong of the Article III standing test requires that Plaintiffs demonstrate their members’ injuries are “likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.”
Valley Forge,
Furthermore, when a plaintiff claims a procedural injury, as in the case at hand, “thе normal standards for redressability” are relaxed. Comm.
to Save the Rio Hondo,
“Unlike redressability, however, the requirement of injury in fact is a hard floor of Article III jurisdiction....”
Summers,
E. Declarants’ Allegations of Non-Climate-Change-Related Injuries Do Not Establish Standing in Climate Change Action
In addition to the general allegations of climate change and injury to New Mexico’s environment discussed
supra
Sections III(B)-(D), Declarants further allege several local impacts from oil аnd gas development.
6
While these allegations provide
In their First Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs assert that the action is justiciable as “the Citizen Groups’ interests in BLM public lands and New Mexico’s environment will be adversely affected and irreparably injured if BLM continues to violate federal laws as alleged herein.” (Doc. 21, ¶ 7.) Plaintiffs further allege that the Citizen Groups’ members use and enjoy BLM and other New Mexico public lands frоm which they derive “recreational, inspirational, religious, scientific, educational, and aesthetic” benefits. (Doc. 21, ¶ 19.) Plaintiffs claim that these interests will be harmed because BLM did not properly address the issue of GHG emissions and global warming in its environmental analysis and approval of the April 2008 and July 2008 quarterly oil and gas lease sales. (Doc. 21, ¶ 107.) Nowhere do Plaintiffs assert that BLM violated federal law by failing to consider noise pollution, unpleasant odors, or any of the other non-climateehange-related injuries alleged in the Declarations. Accordingly, these allegations do not make Plaintiffs’ claims any more justiciable.
Furthermore, none of the Declarants alleged that they lived, worked, or recreated (or planned to do so in the future) near the 92 parcels that were the subject of the oil and gas lease sales at issue in this case. The Declarations are therefore devoid of any “geographical nexus” to, or actual use of the site of the agency action.
Comm, to Save the Rio Hondo,
IV. CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs seek review of BLM’s approval of two quarterly oil and gas lease sales claiming the agency violated NEPA, FLPMA, MLA, and APA by failing to meaningfully address the issue of climate change. (Doc. 80.) Defendants counter that Plaintiffs lack standing to bring their claims. (Docs. 91
&
92.) To show standing, Plaintiffs must demonstrate that they have suffered an injury-in-fact, that is fairly traceable to the Defendants’ wrongful conduct, and that can be redressed by a favorable decision from the Court. Plain
Plaintiffs failed to present any reports, articles, or affidavits from experts indicating an actual or imminent threat from climate change to the federal lands wherе their members live, work, or recreate. With no factual basis upon which to find an actual or imminent environmental threat-other than the members’ subjective observations of changes in the New Mexico climate — Plaintiffs’ alleged injuries are too speculative to constitute an injury-in-fact. Furthermore, Plaintiffs’ failed to establish a geographical nexus between their members and the public lands that are the subject of the agency’s actions. Accordingly, Plaintiffs failed the first element of standing.
To satisfy the second element of standing, causation, Plaintiffs must demonstrate that their members’ injuries are “fairly traceable” to the Defendants’ alleged failure to follow proper procedure. Even assuming full development and production, the approval of the 92 oil and gas leases would amount to only 0.0009% of global GHG emissions. This does not constitute a “meaningful contribution.” Thus, the links in the chain of causation connecting BLM’s actions to the alleged harms to New Mexico’s environment are too weak to support causation.
The third element of standing, however, is relaxed when a plaintiff is claiming procedural injury. Plaintiffs could likely satisfy this relaxed standard. Nevertheless, to establish standing, Plaintiffs must satisfy all three elements.
Declarants’ alleged non-climate-change-related injuries do not confer standing. While these allegations do constitute more concrete and particularized injuries, none of the claims alleged in the First Amended Complaint arise from these injuries, and therefore, they do not make these claims any more justiciable. Furthermore, Plaintiffs fail to establish a geographical nexus between the alleged injuries and approval of the quarterly oil and gas lease sales or demonstrate that the alleged injuries are fairly traceable to the Defendants’ allegedly unlawful behavior. Declarants generally attack the oil and gas industry in New Mexico, but fail to show that they will be personally harmed by approval of the quarterly oil and gas lease sales. Thus, the non-climate-change-related injuries are insufficient to confer standing.
WHEREFORE, having considered the parties’ submissions, the relevant case law, and otherwise being fully informed, the Court hereby DISMISSES Plaintiffs’ claims in the Climate Change Action (Doc. 21, Case No. 6:09-cv-00037-RB-LFG) for lack of standing.
Notes
. Plaintiffs additionally argue that ‘‘[a]s with the causation prong, the redressаbility prong of standing is relaxed in procedural cases.” (Doc. 93 at 13.) Indeed, the fairly traceable requirement does not oblige Plaintiffs to demonstrate to a “scientific certainty” that Defendants’ emissions caused the precise harm suffered by Plaintiffs.
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Gaston Copper Recycling Corp.,
[0]ne living adjacent to the site for proposed construction of a federally licensed dam has standing to challenge the licensing agency’s failure to prepare an environmental impact statement, even though he cannot establish with any certainty that the statement will cause the license to be withheld or altered, and even though the dam will not be completed for many years.... What respondents’ “procedural rights” argument seeks, however, is quite different from this: standing for persons who have no concrete interests affected — persons who live (and propose to live) at the other end of the country from the dam.
Defenders of Wildlife,
. In Exhibit 1, Shirley McNall, a resident of Aztec, New Mexico, states that she has observed intense changes in the climate and natural environment in San Juan County over the past several years and provides the following examples: San Juan County and New Mexico are in a severe drought; there are more frequent dust storms; this year the snow pack in the mountains is less than usual and will result in water shortages; the native trees and shrubs are dying from drought and bark beetle infestations; wildfires are more numerous; the Animas river can no longer be fished; there are changes in bird migrations; deer populations have dwindled; and drought has altered the wildlife habitat. (Doc. 80-1 ¶ 14.)
In Exhibit 2, Declarant Don Schreiber, owner of Devil Springs Ranch in Rio Arriba County, asserts that climate change has impacted the area in which he lives by causing a decline in grasslands, a reduction in water sources, an increase in weeds and woody plants, a decrease in biodiversity, a decline in deer, elk, bobcats, mountain lions, flammulated owls, spotted owls, red-tail hawks, and Golden Eagles, and a decline in deer and elk populations near the ranch. (Doc. 80-2 ¶ 7.)
In Exhibit 3, Taylor Streit, owner of the Taos Fly Shop, asserts that climate change is making the area rivers siltier and warmer, which negatively impacts the trout populations in the rivers upon which his business depends. (Doc. 80-3 ¶¶ 6-8.) Additionally, Mr. Streit, asserts that the extreme snowfalls in Northern New Mexico have virtually wiped out the turkey population that he used to hunt. (Doc. 80-3 ¶ 9.)
In Exhibit 4, Brian Shields, Executive Director of Amigos Bravos, who lives in Taos, New Mexico, alleges that climate change has caused a reduction in river flows due to increasing evaporation, an increase in water temperature in the rivers, higher concentrations of pollutants in the rivers, an increased threat of forest fires, displacement of native aquatic and riparian species, earlier spring snow melt and runoffs, and an earlier blooming of fruit trees, which makes his orchard more vulnerable to spring freeze. (Doc. 80-4 ¶¶ 10, 21, 24.)
In Exhibit 5, Gwen Lachelt, Director of Earthworks, who resides part-time in Albuquerque, New Mexico, asserts that climate change has caused lower river flows, a shorter runoff season, and increased stresses on wildlife. (Doc. 80-5 ¶¶ 5, 7.)
In Exhibit 6, Mike Eisenfeld, who lives in Farmington, New Mexico, alleges that climate change has created an increased incidence of wildfires, tree mortality, and beetle infestation, the degradation of water quality, and increased drought. (Doc. 80-6 ¶ 7.)
. In Exhibit 4, Declarant Brian Shields, Executive Director of Amigos Bravos, points to a 2006 report by the New Mexico Office of the State Engineer concluding that "[cjlimate change will likely have a significant impact on the availability of and demand for New Mexico's water during the next century.” (Doc. 80-4 ¶ 17.) Mr. Shields additionally points to a 2007 report by David Gutzler of New Mexico Earth Matters in which he concludes that the climate models “predict an increase in temperature across the state of New Mexico of more than 5°F in winter and about 8°F in summer by the end of the century.” (Doc. 80-4 ¶ 19.) Mr. Shields further points to a 2008 report by Brian Hurd and Julie Conrad that was published by New Mexico State University that predicts “[s]ocial, economic and environmental systems in water-scarce New Mexico and throughout the arid southwest are vulnerable to disruptions in water supplies that are likely to accompany future climate changes.” (Doc. 80-4 ¶ 19.)
In Exhibit 6, Declarant Mike Eisenfeld indicates that he is familiar with a report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change “which concludes that the evidence demonstrating climate change is 'unequivocal,' and that temperature increases are already impacting our natural ecosystems." (Doc. 80-6 ¶ 6.) Mr. Eisenfeld additionally states that he is "aware, as noted by Dr. James Hansen of NASA, that we are reaching 'tipping points,’ beyond which consequences to our world will be much more dire.” (Doc. 80-6 ¶ 6.)
. Notably, in a recent case,
Am. Elec. Power Co.,
. Shirley McNall states that she does most of her recreation in northwestern New Mexico and that she resides in San Juan County, New Mexico, approximately 700 feet from BLM land where there are several gas wells; yet, she does not indicate that she uses or lives near any of the land at issue in this case. (Doc. 80-1.)
Don Schreiber states that he owns a ranch in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, which is at the heart of the nation’s second largest gas field; but again, there is no mention of his proximity to any of the oil and gas leases at issue in this case. (Doc. 80-2.)
Taylor Streit lives in Taos, New Mexico and guides fly fishing trips in northern New Mexico; however, there is no mention whatsoever of oil and gas wells in his declaration. (Doc. 80-3.)
Brian Shields lives in Taos, New Mexico, he is the Executive Director of Amigos Bravos, and he has recreated or worked as a guide throughout New Mexico and the West; still, there is no mention of how any of the oil and gas leases that Amigos Bravos challenges have directly impacted him. (Doc. 80-4.) Mr. Shields additionally complains that the organization was not publicly noticed with regard to the challenged leases and was therefore denied the opportunity for participation in the lease approval process (Doc. 80-4 ¶¶ 14 & 22); yet, his Declaration gives no indication of what, if any, ties he or the environmental group’s members have to the BLM land at issue such that notice was required.
Gwen Lachelt resides part-time in Albuquerque, New Mexico and has camped, hiked, and hiked in many parts of New Mexico, but other than having toured oil and gas wells on ranches in Eddy and Lea County, she mentions nothing about how she has been personally impacted by the oil and gas leases approved by the BLM. (Doc. 80-5.)
Mike Eisenfeld, a resident of Farmington, New Mexico, who lives, works, and recreates in the San Juan Basin, stated that his work often takes him out to the oil and gas fields; however, he provides no indication that he works, or will work, on or near the BLM land where the oil and gas leases were granted. (Doc. 80-6.)
. Shirley McNall asserts the following localized injuries from the oil and gas wells in New Mexico: the wells produce hydrogen sulfide emissions; there are gas vapor emissions in her home; the oil and gas equipment frequently leaks; there are unsightly pits and tanks from which unpleasant odors emanate; there is frequеnt flaring from the wells; there are loud compressors that emit offensive exhaust fumes; there is a strong odor of gas fumes near the wells; she and her family used to enjoy camping, viewing wildlife, and boating at Navajo Lake State Park, but the noise and odors associated with the wells have caused them to stop going there; while birding near Navajo Lake, the low din and vibration of the compressors gave her a headache; and finally, Ms. McNall asserts that her birding in San Juan County has been marred by the roar and rattle of the gas field equipment and the strong odor of gas fumes and exhaust from the compressor engines. (Doc. 80-1.)
Don Schreiber asserts that the numerous wells near his Devil’s Spring Ranch in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico have negatively affected him and his ranch because they decrease beneficial vegetation; they interrupt natural water flow; each well pad disrupts approximately five acres of soil; many of the wells leak methane gas; and the wells discharge nitrogen and other gas fumes into the air near where the ranchers work. (Doc. 80-2.)
Mike Eisenfeld, who lives, works, and recreates in the San Juan Basin in northwestern New Mexico asserts that he has been impacted by the degraded air quality caused
