The International Energy Agency has said countries must stop approving new coal mines and oil and gas fields in order to hold global warming to an average of 1.5 degrees Celsius, compared with preindustrial levels. That’s the threshold beyond which the likelihood significantly increases of catastrophic heat waves, drought, flooding and widespread extinctions. Earth has already heated an average of 1.1 degrees Celsius since the Industrial Revolution.
As a candidate, Mr. Biden pledged to end new drilling on public lands and in federal waters. Shortly after taking office, he imposed a temporary moratorium on new leases, but a federal judge in Louisiana blocked that policy. The administration is appealing the decision.
The administration’s first and only offshore drilling auction, for millions of acres in the Gulf of Mexico, was overturned by a different judge who said the government had not considered the impacts of climate change thoroughly enough. The administration has not appealed that ruling.
The five-year plan is required under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act. The current blueprint, finalized under President Barack Obama, expired on Thursday. President Donald J. Trump proposed opening virtually all United States waters to drilling, but that plan faced strong opposition from Florida Republicans concerned about the impact on tourism and it was never finalized.
Experts have said the earliest Mr. Biden’s plan could be finalized is late this year. The administration will take public comments on the plan for 90 days after it is published in the Federal Register, most likely early next week.
Interior Department officials noted that Mr. Trump’s plan proposed 47 lease sales across every coastal area of the country, including places that never had drilling. The Biden plan “significantly narrowed the area considered for leasing to the Gulf of Mexico and Cook Inlet, where there is existing production and infrastructure” officials said in a statement.