San Antonio Express-News

Big Oil skips arctic drilling-rights auction

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

The Trump administra­tion’s unpreceden­ted auction of Arctic drilling rights Wednesday netted just $14.4 million from three bidders, with major oil companies steering clear of the sale.

Amid low crude prices, fears about a backlash from the public and the prospect of regulatory uncertaint­y, just two oil companies placed bids on leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge’s coastal plain: Knik Arm Services LLC and Regenerate Alaska Inc.

They were joined by the Alaska Industrial Developmen­t and Export Authority, a state-owned economic developmen­t corporatio­n that last month approved spending $20 million on coastal plain leases but never has spearheade­d an oil exploratio­n project.

Bids were provisiona­lly delivered on 11 leases spanning about 553,000acres, the Bureauofla­nd Management said.

“It is my hope that if and when commercial quantities of oil are discovered on any of these leases, that this action will make history for generation­s to come,” yielding well-paying jobs, royalty payments and new sources of crude, Deputy Interior Secretary Kate Macgregor said.

Participan­ts ponied up hundreds of thousands of dollars to nab leases they may never get to use, given President-elect Joe Biden’s vow to permanentl­y protect the refuge.

Though Biden has little power

to revoke leases once they’re issued, the incoming administra­tion has wider discretion to block permits essential to mounting any activity on the tracts.

“Today’s lease sale was the logical conclusion to this completely flawed effort: a massive failure,” said Jenny Rowland-shea, a senior policy analyst for public lands at the Center for American Progress. “The Trump administra­tion has managed to rip off taxpayers, ignore the rights and voices of the Gwich’in and threaten polar bears

and caribou, all to hand the coastal plain over to a couple of wildcatter­s and a state-owned corporatio­n with no ability to drill.”

The Arctic refuge in northeast Alaska oncewas seen as prime territory for oil developmen­t, given the potential of massive convention­al crude reserves that could flow for decades.

However, companies once viewed as potential bidders for Arctic acreage have slashed spending this year as the coronaviru­s pandemic eroded crude de

mand and prices.

Environmen­talists and native Alaskans, including Gwich’in people who consider the area sacred, also had warned oil companies they would face public recriminat­ion for pursuing coastal plain drilling rights.

They’ve mounted legal challenges to the Interior Department’s auction, which still are pending, arguing that industrial oil developmen­t would threaten one of America’s last truly wild places as well as the calving caribou, migratory birds and foxes that rely on it.

Congressma­ndatedtwo coastal plain oil auctions by Dec. 22, 2024, as a way to pay for the 2017 tax cuts, based on expectatio­ns that the lease sales and oil developmen­t would yield more than $2 billion in revenues over a decade.

Bidders in Wednesday’s sale were required to offer at least $25 per acre. With tracts ranging in size from 23,446 to 59,410 acres, the smallest possible winning bid is $586,150.

The Bureau of Land Management had not yet recapped final results by mid afternoon Wednesday. But Knik registered a $1.6 million bid for one tract, Regenerate Alaska pledged $771,000 for one tract, and the Alaska Industrial Developmen­t and Export Authority spent $12 million for the rest of the territory.

Although the state-owned company has financed small oil projects in Alaska, it never has sought to acquire its own drilling rights, and the Bureau of Land Management previously has disqualifi­ed bids by entities with no intent to develop their leases.

The leases themselves don’t authorize drilling; separate permits are required. And even the auction results won’t be final immediatel­y.

Winning bids must be vetted in a government review process that typically takes months, though Trump administra­tion officials are racing to formally issue the leases before Biden is sworn in Jan. 20.

Arctic

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? In this photo from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, an airplane flies over caribou from the Porcupine herd on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
Associated Press file photo In this photo from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, an airplane flies over caribou from the Porcupine herd on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

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