This webpage was generated programmatically; to access the article in its original context, you can follow the link below:
https://alaskapublic.org/news/politics/washington-d-c/2025-01-07/why-alaska-is-trying-to-stop-the-feds-from-issuing-drilling-leases-in-the-arctic-refuge
if you wish to have this article taken down from our site, please reach out to us
Legal representatives for the state of Alaska initiated a lawsuit on Monday aiming to nullify a federal auction for oil and gas extraction in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The legal action claims that the Biden administration is offering an insufficient amount of land for leasing and has imposed numerous restrictions that render the lease auction unlawful.
Consequently, the state, a steadfast advocate for drilling in the refuge, is requesting a judge to prevent the federal government from granting leases to oil corporations. This reversal of roles represents the latest twist in a lengthy saga concerning the fate of the coastal plain of the refuge, located in Alaska’s northeast region.
Following years of intense debate in Congress, Senator Lisa Murkowski promoted a clause in a 2017 tax statute requiring two lease auctions, each covering a minimum of 400,000 acres, on the refuge’s coastal plain.
The inaugural auction took place in 2021, during the last moments of the Trump administration. Reflecting industry interest, it turned out to be a failure. None of the major oil firms placed bids. Two private companies secured leases but subsequently gave them up. The primary bidder was the state-operated Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority.
In 2023, the Biden administration annulled the leases, citing flaws in the process.
The state, referencing an earlier congressional evaluation, indicated it anticipated receiving over $1 billion from lease revenues, in addition to royalty payments and the ancillary economic advantages that arise from increased industrial activity.
Bids for the second auction were due on Monday, with plans to reveal them on Friday. The state’s lawsuit highlights that this time, the government has made merely one-third of the coastal plain available for bids.
“Even worse,” the legal document states, “the available lands for lease are rendered impossible or impracticable to develop due to significant restrictions on surface use and occupancy. Essentially, the [auction conditions] are designed
to obstruct and deter, rather than encourage, the development of the Coastal Plain’s mineral assets.”
The Biden administration asserts that these restrictions represent the most effective way to reconcile the various laws it is bound to uphold. Prior to the 2017 statute mandating lease auctions, Congress established other objectives for the Arctic Refuge, including the conservation of birds and wildlife, as well as safeguarding subsistence hunting and fishing rights.
If the lawsuit prevails, the Trump administration could be granted another chance to offer more land for lease under conditions that would support drilling.
This webpage was generated programmatically; to access the article in its original context, you can follow the link below:
https://alaskapublic.org/news/politics/washington-d-c/2025-01-07/why-alaska-is-trying-to-stop-the-feds-from-issuing-drilling-leases-in-the-arctic-refuge
if you wish to have this article taken down from our site, please reach out to us