Washington: After moving to unstitch climate change rules, US President Donald Trump is turning his sights on America's vast nature preserves, with a view to possibly lifting federal protections brought in over the past two decades.
On Wednesday, he is to sign an executive order reviewing decisions by predecessors Barack Obama, George W Bush and Bill Clinton to designate public land a 'national monument' under a 1906 law known as the Antiquities Act.
The aim is to "give states and local communities a meaningful voice in the process," said Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, whose department oversees federal land use under the motto 'Protecting America's Great Outdoors and Powering Our Future'.
Mr Zinke said the outcome of the review was not pre-ordained. His department is to provide an interim report in 45 days then a fuller one in 120 days.
But it conceivably could roll back protections fixed under the Antiquities Act, brought in under president Theodore Roosevelt, keen on conserving America's natural heritage, and set the scene for fierce legal challenges.
'National monument' land has come to be synonymous over the years with a bar to drilling for fossil fuels on public land, or other commercial activities.
While Republicans in Utah and other states are keen to lift protections they see as too expansive and undermining economic opportunities, environmental groups and Native Americans are deeply opposed.
In the past, areas presidents have tagged as 'national monuments' were later transformed by Congress into full-fledged National Parks, the Grand Canyon and Death Valley among them.
Since the Act came into force more than a century ago, only three presidents, all Republicans, did not use its powers: Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George H W Bush.
Mr Obama had millions of hectares (acres) classified under the Act during his presidency, including maritime zones, especially in the Pacific.
Under Mr Trump's review, only 'monuments' of 40,000 hectares (100,000 acres) or more will be examined.
A key area will be the Bears Ears National Monument, a 530,000-hectare (1.3-million-acre) zone in Utah Mr Obama proclaimed in 2016.
Another will be the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument also in Utah, a spectacular tract of canyons, ridges and a river, designated by Mr Clinton in 1996.
The Republican senator for Utah, Orrin Hatch, has railed against the national monument decisions made in Washington, saying his state should have more say over how the land is protected.
In a Washington Post opinion piece, Mr Hatch said Mr Obama "ignored the best interests of Utah and cast aside the will of the people - all in favor of a unilateral approach meant to satisfy the demands of far-left interest groups."
Other presidents, too, went too far Mr Hatch said, adding that Mr Trump "stands ready to undo the harm brought about by their overreach".
On Wednesday, he is to sign an executive order reviewing decisions by predecessors Barack Obama, George W Bush and Bill Clinton to designate public land a 'national monument' under a 1906 law known as the Antiquities Act.
The aim is to "give states and local communities a meaningful voice in the process," said Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, whose department oversees federal land use under the motto 'Protecting America's Great Outdoors and Powering Our Future'.
But it conceivably could roll back protections fixed under the Antiquities Act, brought in under president Theodore Roosevelt, keen on conserving America's natural heritage, and set the scene for fierce legal challenges.
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While Republicans in Utah and other states are keen to lift protections they see as too expansive and undermining economic opportunities, environmental groups and Native Americans are deeply opposed.
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Since the Act came into force more than a century ago, only three presidents, all Republicans, did not use its powers: Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George H W Bush.
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Under Mr Trump's review, only 'monuments' of 40,000 hectares (100,000 acres) or more will be examined.
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Another will be the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument also in Utah, a spectacular tract of canyons, ridges and a river, designated by Mr Clinton in 1996.
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In a Washington Post opinion piece, Mr Hatch said Mr Obama "ignored the best interests of Utah and cast aside the will of the people - all in favor of a unilateral approach meant to satisfy the demands of far-left interest groups."
Other presidents, too, went too far Mr Hatch said, adding that Mr Trump "stands ready to undo the harm brought about by their overreach".
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