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December oil and gas leasing will affect the Roan Plateau

Last month, the Bureau of Land Management floated its proposal to sell leases on over 126 thousand acres of public lands in Colorado for oil and gas drilling.

On June 9, a 30-day scoping period began for 114 parcels to be brought to auction in December. Some of those parcels are in the Roan Plateau, which towers three thousand feet above the Colorado River near Rifle. This remote and largely pristine area is home to diverse and rare species of flora and fauna.

A tour with EcoFlight brought advocates, reporters, hunters and anglers together to scope the proposed leasing parcels.

EcoFlight plane at the Rifle Airport.
Katalina Villarreal
EcoFlight plane at the Rifle Airport.

Approaching the plateau, it was surprising to see how much land had already been developed and extracted. Roads disrupted and made bare what would have been land covered in aspen stands, mountain meadows, juniper, and more.

While flying over the proposed lease areas, it was noticeable how lush and green all the vegetation was. The plane flew past a glistening stream home to pristine and genetically unique cutthroat trout.

Prime elk-herd territory up for leasing.
Katalina Villarreal
Prime elk-herd territory up for leasing.

Conversations about the Roan Plateau and the proposed leases struck up when people were back on land. Dean Riggs, now retired from Colorado Parks and Wildlife, shared his thoughts.

“The most significant thing of all of this is that we continue to lose habitat by the bucket load. You know, the question then becomes: well where is wildlife supposed to be then? Where does wildlife have an opportunity to live on the landscape and do all of the necessary steps to survive and be meaningful populations of wildlife?”

The Roan Plateau is also home to elk herds, mule deer, greater sage-grouse, and endemic plants like the Parachute penstemon.

“And so then you start to think, well what’s it going to look like 60 years from now?” Dean asked. “Are we still going to have the biggest elk population in the United States? That habitat that we are going to lose out of these things, you can't put a price tag on that. It’s not a nice to have, it’s a you got to have it.”

Aspen stands and mountain meadows up for leasing.
Katalina Villarreal
Aspen stands and mountain meadows up for leasing.

Federal policy changes may significantly cut local voices out of the Bureau of Land Management’s public land planning process. Even as the BLM scopes December lease sales in Colorado and Arizona, the U.S. Department of the Interior proposed changes to the oil and gas leasing process, announced in late June. One rule change would reduce public participation from 90 days to 10 days. In the Federal Register notice, the Interior Department said the goal is to “significantly expedite” the process.

Katalina Villarreal, born and raised in Carbondale, reports with KDNK for the 5-6 evening news. She also pitches and produces stories for the air and writes with the Sopris Sun newspaper. Katalina believes in the power of education and being informed. Uplifting the community is her priority as a human and journalist. She will graduate from Central Washington University's online English: Professional and Creative Writing program December 2026 and plans to stay in the valley pursuing a career in journalism. Katalina is proud to be a part of KDNK's news department and hopes to grow with it.