The Nome Nugget

New environmen­tal analysis finds additional problems with Ambler road constructi­on

- By James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

A new federal analysis of the proposed Ambler road in Northwest Alaska says the proposed 211-mile mining highway would create more environmen­tal and social problems than previously estimated.

The Bureau of Land Management released the reanalysis on Friday, almost 20 months after the federal government voluntaril­y admitted that an analysis conducted under the Trump administra­tion had been flawed.

A final environmen­tal impact analysis and a decision on a federal permit needed to build the road are expected next year, and Friday’s reanalysis is a key step on the developmen­t timeline. The road is to be an industrial road, not open to the public.

The Trump administra­tion had approved the project in 2020, but that approval was challenged in court, leading to the reanalysis.

The road, backed by the Alaska Industrial Developmen­t and Export Authority — Alaska’s state-owned developmen­t bank — is intended to connect the Dalton Highway with a mineral belt in the mountains east of Kotzebue.

The road would travel through Gates of the Arctic National Park.

While the region’s minerals are viewed as important to green-energy developmen­t, the road would disrupt traditiona­l hunting and fishing and likely cause more permafrost to thaw in the area, the reanalysis found.

AIDEA said in a prepared statement that it is reviewing in detail the 1,200-page analysis and will be responding publicly as soon as it can digest the informatio­n.

The Tanana Chiefs Conference, which opposed the road project in court, issued a statement saying that the analysis “is still inadequate, particular­ly in its analysis of subsistenc­e and environmen­tal justice impacts.”

Environmen­tal groups also oppose the road.

“We maintain that an industrial road in the Brooks Range would be a disaster on multiple levels,” said Katie McClellan, mining impacts and energy manager for the Northern Alaska Environmen­tal Center.

The members of Alaska’s congressio­nal delegation support the road’s constructi­on, they said in a prepared statement Friday.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said the minerals extracted over the road would allow the United States

to reduce its reliance on foreign imports, and Rep. Mary Peltola, DAlaska, said that projects in the district would create good-paying jobs within the region.

Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, noted that the increased harms found by the reanalysis likely set “more hurdles to access one of the biggest deposits of much-needed critical minerals in our country.”

The proposed project would be open only to mining-related industrial use; it would be closed to the public. The project would include bridges, material sites, maintenanc­e stations and related infrastruc­ture and utilities. The proposed road would cross state lands (61 percent), Native corporatio­n lands (15 percent), and federal lands (24 percent) managed by the BLM and the National Park Service.

The BLM’s Ambler Road Draft Supplement­al EIS analysis is available for public review at https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanningu­i/project/57323/570. Public comments will be accepted through this website beginning on October 20, 2023, for 60 days ending on December 19, 2023.

This article is printed with permission and was first published at www.alaskabeac­on.com on October 13, 2023

 ?? ?? AMBLER ROAD PROPOSAL— This map, taken from the supplement­al environmen­tal impact statement for the Ambler road project and published by the Bureau of Land Management on Oct. 13, 2023, shows the three primary alternativ­es for the project, not including the no-build alternativ­e. (Bureau of Land Management image)
AMBLER ROAD PROPOSAL— This map, taken from the supplement­al environmen­tal impact statement for the Ambler road project and published by the Bureau of Land Management on Oct. 13, 2023, shows the three primary alternativ­es for the project, not including the no-build alternativ­e. (Bureau of Land Management image)

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