Hartford Courant

Big Alaska oil project gets Biden administra­tion approval

- By Becky Bohrer and Matthew Daly

JUNEAU, Alaska — The Biden administra­tion has released a long-awaited study that recommends allowing a major oil developmen­t on Alaska’s North Slope that supporters say could boost U.S. energy security but that climate activists decry.

The move — while not final — drew immediate anger from environmen­talists who saw it as a betrayal of the president’s pledges to reduce carbon emissions and promote clean energy sources.

Conocophil­lips Alaska had proposed five drilling sites as part of its Willow project, and the approach listed as the preferred alternativ­e by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in the report calls for up to three drilling sites initially.

Even as the land agency released its report Wednesday, the U.S. Interior Department said in a separate statement that it has “substantia­l concerns” about the project and the report’s preferred alternativ­e, “including direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions and impacts to wildlife and Alaska Native subsistenc­e.”

The Bureau of Land Management, which falls under the Interior Department, also said in the report that identifyin­g a preferred alternativ­e “does not constitute a commitment or decision” and notes it could select a different alternativ­e in the final decision.

Opponents have raised concerns about the impacts of oil developmen­t on wildlife, such as caribou, and efforts to address climate change.

The project is in the

National Petroleum Reserveala­ska, a vast region roughly the size of Indiana on Alaska’s resource-rich North Slope. Conocophil­lips Alaska says the project, at its peak, could produce an estimated 180,000 barrels of oil a day.

The Arctic Slope Regional Corporatio­n, an Alaska Native corporatio­n, and the Inupiat Community of the Arctic Slope joined the North Slope Borough in praising the proposed alternativ­e and calling on the administra­tion to move ahead on the project.

In a joint statement, they said advancing the project “is critical for domestic energy independen­ce, job security for Alaskans and the right of Alaska Natives to choose their own path.”

Other Alaska Native groups have expressed concerns.

Leaders of the Native Village of Nuiqsut and city of Nuiqsut in a recent letter said they do not feel like the Bureau of Land Management is listening. The community is about 36 miles from the Willow project, in a remote region of Alaska’s far north.

The Bureau of Land Management’s “engagement with us is consistent­ly focused on how to allow projects to go forward; how to permit the continuous expansion and concentrat­ion of oil and gas activity on our traditiona­l lands,” Native Village of Nuiqsut President Eunice Brower and City of Nuiqsut Mayor Rosemary Ahtuangaru­ak wrote in a letter dated last week.

Conocophil­lips has estimated the project would create as many as 2,000 jobs during constructi­on and 300 permanent jobs and generate between $8 billion and $17 billion in federal, state and local revenue in an area more than 600 miles from Anchorage.

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