Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Alaska oil leases issued as Trump exits

- BECKY BOHRER

JUNEAU, Alaska — The U.S. Bureau of Land Management said Tuesday that it has issued leases covering nearly 685 square miles in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in a move denounced by critics in the waning hours of the Trump administra­tion.

Lesli Ellis-Wouters, a spokeswoma­n for the agency in Alaska, said leases were issued for tracts for which it had received required paperwork.

The first oil and gas lease sale held for the refuge’s coastal plain on Jan. 6 yielded bids on 11 tracts, half the number offered.

The Bureau of Land Management said it signed and issued leases on nine tracts, including seven of the nine won by the Alaska Industrial Developmen­t and Export Authority, a state corporatio­n and the main bidder during the sale. Knik Arm Services LLC and Regenerate Alaska Inc. also were each issued a lease, the agency said.

The leases were signed Jan. 14, Ellis-Wouters said by email. They were publicly announced Tuesday, the last full day of President Donald Trump’s term.

The agency has said it is acting in accord with a law passed in 2017 that called for lease sales. President-elect Joe Biden has expressed opposition to drilling in the refuge.

Bernadette Demientief­f, executive director of the Gwich’in Steering Committee formed by Indian tribal leaders who oppose drilling in the refuge, condemned the issuance of leases.

The Trump administra­tion’s decision “to hand sacred lands to exploiters shows its commitment to continuing its cowardly assault on the Gwich’in Nation, even in its last days,” she said in a statement.

The Gwich’in consider the coastal plain sacred.

Conservati­on and Indian groups and tribal government­s were among those who had sought to block the issuance of leases and a survey program pending decisions on underlying lawsuits challengin­g the adequacy of reviews on which they are based. Those lawsuits remain unresolved.

Adam Kolton, executive director of the Alaska Wilderness League, in a statement said the lease sale wasn’t legitimate and “won’t stand.”

“We look forward to President-elect Biden stopping the liquidatio­n of this national treasure and restoring protection­s for its iconic wildlife, wilderness and the Indigenous peoples who depend on it,” he said.

Supporters of allowing drilling in the rugged remote area off the Beaufort Sea see it as a way to bolster oil production and create or sustain jobs.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy, a Republican, has said the turnout for the lease sale reflected efforts by environmen­tal groups to try to “undermine the process by pressuring banks and finance companies to withdraw from oil and gas projects in the Arctic.”

Kara Moriarty, president and chief executive officer of the Alaska Oil and Gas Associatio­n, has cited “brutal economic realities” facing the oil and gas industry, along with “ongoing regulatory uncertaint­y.”

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