Alaska oil drilling protesters disrupt White House climate adviser appearance

Reuters

Published Mar 20, 2023 06:39PM ET

Updated Mar 20, 2023 08:52PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Protesters criticizing President Joseph Biden's approval of an oil drilling project in Alaska on Monday blocked an administration official from delivering a speech about U.S. climate leadership.

Ali Zaidi, White House climate adviser, was unable to address the event on the "Future of U.S. Climate & Energy Leadership" at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. A dozen protesters holding a sign saying "End Fossil Fuels" chanted: "Keep your promise, no new drilling" for several minutes, preventing Zaidi from starting his remarks.

They criticized Biden for breaking a campaign promise to end new drilling on federal land, including the recent decision to approve a scaled-back version of ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP)' $7 billion oil and gas drilling Willow project in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve.

ConocoPhillips has been a donor to CSIS.

Protesters believe the Willow decision may overshadow Biden's other climate achievements. The administration has been touting climate investments stemming from its signature climate law called the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)and its bipartisan infrastructure law.

Zaidi engaged with the protesters for a few minutes, and highlighted the administration's passage of IRA, which he said would create clean energy jobs in parts of the country that have produced fossil fuels, such as Appalachia.