The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

US restricts drilling and mining in Alaska wilderness, angering state leaders

- NICHOLA GROOM

The Biden administra­tion took steps on Friday to limit both oil and gas drilling and mining in Alaska, angering state officials who said the restrictio­ns will cost jobs and make the U.S. reliant on foreign resources, but pleasing environmen­talists.

The measures are aligned with President Joe Biden's efforts to rein in oil and gas activities on public lands and conserve 30% of U.S. lands and waters to combat climate change.

The Interior Department finalized a regulation to block oil and gas developmen­t on 40% of Alaska's National Petroleum Preserve to protect habitats for polar bears, caribou and other wildlife and the way of life of indigenous communitie­s.

The agency also said it would reject a proposal by a state agency to construct a 340-kilometre road intended to enable mine developmen­t in the Ambler Mining District in north central Alaska.

The agency cited risks to caribou and fish population­s that dozens of native communitie­s rely on for subsistenc­e.

"I am proud that my administra­tion is taking action to conserve more than 13 million acres in the Western Arctic and to honour the culture, history, and enduring wisdom of Alaska Natives who have lived on and stewarded these lands since time immemorial," Biden said in a statement.

The NPR-A, as it is known, is a 23 million-acre (9.3 million hectare) area on the state's North Slope that is the largest tract of undisturbe­d public land in the United States. The new rule would prohibit oil and gas leasing on 10.6 million acres (4.3 million hectares) while limiting developmen­t on more than 2 million additional acres (809,000 hectares).

The rule would not affect existing oil and gas operations, including Conocophil­lips' $8 billion Willow project, which the Biden administra­tion approved last year.

Currently, oil and gas leases cover about 2.5 million acres (1 million hectares).

Alaska's native population is split on oil and gas developmen­t, and some groups strongly opposed the administra­tion's decision, saying taxes on the industry help support schools and infrastruc­ture in their communitie­s.

"The final NPR-A rule will hurt the very residents the federal government purports to help by rolling back years of progress, impoverish­ing our communitie­s, and imperiling our Iñupiaq culture," Voice of the Arctic Inupiat President Nagruk Harcharek said in a statement.

The Ambler Access Project, proposed by the Alaska Industrial and Developmen­t Export Authority, would enable mine developmen­t in an area with copper, zinc and lead deposits and create jobs, the authority has said.

Interior's Bureau of Land Management released its environmen­tal analysis of the project on Friday, recommendi­ng "no action" as its preferred alternativ­e. The project now faces a final decision by the Interior Department.

Ambler Metals, a company seeking to develop the region, said it would not give up.

"We remain committed to this important project and will continue to push forward using all possible avenues," Kaleb Froelich, the company's managing director, said in a statement.

Republican senators from Alaska and several other states held a press conference on Thursday to slam the administra­tion's widely anticipate­d decisions.

"When you take off access to our resources, when you say you cannot drill, you cannot produce, you cannot explore, you cannot move it -- this is the energy insecurity that we're talking about," Senator Lisa Murkowski said. "We're still going to need the germanium, the gallium, the copper. We're still going to need the oil. But we're just not going to get it from Alaska."

Environmen­talists, an important part of Biden's base ahead of the Nov. 5 U.S. elections, praised the moves for protecting habitats and cultural resources at a time of change in the region.

"As the Arctic undergoes dramatic climatic changes, this new rule (on NPR-A) is absolutely necessary to protect birds, caribou, and fish,” said David Krause, interim executive director at Audubon Alaska.

 ?? LUCAS JACKSON ■ REUTERS ?? The Brooks mountain range spreads out to the horizon in northern Alaska.
LUCAS JACKSON ■ REUTERS The Brooks mountain range spreads out to the horizon in northern Alaska.

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