Uncertain future for Trump's offshore drilling plan after legal decision

The Trump administration is evaluating its options after a recent legal hurdle.

But on Thursday, Interior Secretary David Bernhardt said they don't expect to move on the drilling plan any time soon.

Bernhardt told the Wall Street Journal that a resolution in that court case could be "discombobulating" to the plan if they move forward with it and that "I'm not at a point now where it's an imminent thing."

In his confirmation hearing Bernhardt told senators they were still in the early stages of the process.

Bernhardt's spokeswoman said he's "grappling with the situation" after the legal ruling and that the department is "simply evaluating all of its options to determine the best pathway to accomplish the mission entrusted to it by the president."

The Interior Department has focused on expanding energy production on federal lands as part of Trump's push to make America more self-sufficient.

Then Trump issued an order revoking drilling bans on areas of the Arctic and Atlantic oceans rich in wildlife but an Alaska judge ruled they were illegal because the law cited to create the protections doesn't give the president the authority to revoke them.

Environmental groups and supporters of the legal challenge hailed the news as a step toward stopping the plan altogether, calling it a win if the offshore drilling plan is sidelined or blocked altogether.