The Borneo Post

Alaskan oil lease sale brings few bids despite vast territory offered

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ANCHORAGE, ALASKA: An oil-and-gas lease sale that raised concerns with environmen­talists due to the vast amount of acres offered in Arctic Alaska drew few bids, government officials said.

Seven bids were received, covering about 80,000 acres – or less than 1 per cent of the 10.3 million acres offered in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska by the Trump administra­tion.

It was, by far, more territory than ever offered in any of the previous 12 NPR-A lease sales held since 1999.

The sale was the latest move by the administra­tion of President Donald Trump, a Republican, supporting his pledge to make the United States ‘energy dominant’ by boosting output of oil, natural gas and coal.

Environmen­talists have generally accepted some oil developmen­t in the National Petroleum Reserve but worry the Trump administra­tion will lift too many restrictio­ns.

Environmen­talists want to entirely block opening the state’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling.

ConocoPhil­lips Alaska Inc, in partnershi­p with Anadarko Petroleum Corp, submitted the seven bids, totalling US$1.16 million, for tracts in the NPR-A. Results were revealed in a bid opening conducted in Anchorage by the US Bureau of Land Management.

The ConocoPhil­lips-Anadarko bids were for tracts along the southern border of ConocoPhil­lips’ Greater Mooses Tooth unit, where oil production is expected to start next year.

“Lease sale interest is unpredicta­ble,” Ted Murphy, associate director of the BLM’s Alaska office, said in a telephone news conference after the sale. “We don’t know what industry, ultimately, will be interested in getting from year to year.”

Last year’s NPR-A lease sale drew US$18.8 million in bids, led by ConocoPhil­lips, for 67 tracts covering 613,529 acres.

One environmen­talist said the results on Wednesday suggest that the Trump administra­tion is overestima­ting industry’s desire to drill new Arctic territory.

“It seems, from my perspectiv­e, that it’s this mentality that if we open it, industry will come. And that’s not necessaril­y true,” said Lisa Baraff of the Fairbanksb­ased Northern Alaska Environmen­tal Center.

Kara Moriarty, executive director of the Alaska Oil and Gas Associatio­n, said the low level of NPR-A bidding might show that companies were being strategic about new leases.

She noted that another lease sale for state land ‘right next door’ to NPR-A drew brisk bidding.

The Alaska Oil and Gas Division’s lease sale, also held Wednesday, drew US$ 19.9 million and over 100 bids, mostly from Spanish energy company Repsol SA and Colorado-based independen­t oil company Armstrong.— Reuters

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