Alaska GOPers Want Most Of State’s Coast Exempt From Zinke’s Drilling Plan

UNITED STATES - JANUARY 26: From left, Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, and Senate Energy and Natural Resources Chairwoman Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, conduct a news conference in the Capitol's Senate studio to "respond to the Obama administration's efforts to lock up millions of acres of the nation's richest oil and natural gas prospects on the Arctic coastal plain and move to block development of Alaska's offshore resources," January 26, 2015. (Photo By Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)
UNITED STATES - JANUARY 26: From left, Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, and Senate Energy and Natural Resources Chairwoman Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, conduct a news conference in the Capitol's Se... UNITED STATES - JANUARY 26: From left, Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, and Senate Energy and Natural Resources Chairwoman Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, conduct a news conference in the Capitol's Senate studio to "respond to the Obama administration's efforts to lock up millions of acres of the nation's richest oil and natural gas prospects on the Arctic coastal plain and move to block development of Alaska's offshore resources," January 26, 2015. (Photo By Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call) MORE LESS
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ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Alaska’s all-Republican congressional delegation three weeks ago praised Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke after he announced nearly all federal waters off the state’s coast could be offered for oil and gas drilling.

But after further consideration, U.S. Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan and Rep. Don Young say they will support lease sales between 2019 and 2024 in just three areas: Cook Inlet, where petroleum platforms have extracted oil and natural gas for decades, and the Arctic waters of the Chukchi and Beaufort seas.

In a letter Friday to Zinke, the delegation requested that most Alaska waters from the state’s Panhandle to the Bering Strait be removed from the proposed five-year drilling plan.

“We believe the strongest near-term offshore program in Alaska is one that focuses on the Chukchi, Beaufort and Cook Inlet,” they wrote. “Such a program will maximize agency resources and reflect the areas with the broadest support for development among Alaskans.”

Zinke announced the proposed lease sale plan Jan. 4. He said revisions could be made after public comment.

The proposal excluded only one area of Alaska: the North Aleutian Basin, home to Bristol Bay and the world’s largest run of sockeye salmon.

The proposal drew immediate opposition from governors in East and West Coast states. After Florida Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican, met with Zinke, the secretary announced that drilling would be “off the table” for waters in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean off Florida.

In Alaska, proposed lease sales in the Bering Sea drew strong condemnation from the Bering Sea Elders Group, an association of Alaska Native elders appointed from 39 tribes, and Kawerak Inc., a regional nonprofit organization, which said oil and gas activities pose a serious threat to marine life.

“These basins are where tribes from our region have harvested subsistence resources for millennia and where local people from our region fish and crab commercially,” Kawerak said in an announcement.

A spokeswoman for Murkowski, Nicole Daigle, said the delegation was not responding to drilling critics in requesting that most Alaska drilling areas be kept out of the proposed lease plan. Murkowski appreciated Zinke putting everything on the table and expected some areas to be dropped, Daigle said.

Drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, home to polar bears, walrus and ice seals that support the subsistence economies of coastal villages, is strongly opposed by environmental groups. The say the harsh climate make spills inevitable and that cleanup of a major spill would be impossible in waters choked by or covered in sea ice.

However, federal regulators say the Beaufort Sea, off Alaska’s north coast, holds an estimated 8.9 billion barrels of oil and the Chukchi, off Alaska’s northwest coast, holds an estimated 15.4 billion barrels.

Royal Dutch Shell spent $2.1 billion on Chukchi Sea leases in 2008, invested another $5 billion overall in U.S. Arctic waters, and pulled out after drilling a dry hole in 2015.

Murkowski, Sullivan and Young contend drilling in Arctic waters can be done safely. They said they strongly support the inclusion of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas for lease sales while at the same time urging “meaningful consultation” with communities.

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Notable Replies

  1. This is the thing about these trump admin clowns. They’re forcing GOP to swallow one poison pill after another. The party really, possibly, should/could come dead in late fall 2018…finally.

  2. The Stepford Republicans will cave on their coast line. Alaskans don’t often enough seem to care about how “extracting resources” are performed and to hell with the Arctic Rufuge if it means more revenues for each resident, so it’s a wonder they even care about this or that it could put the fishing/crabbing industry to waste in one accident/spill.

  3. The balls of this administration who think they can suck up to big oil while ignoring the wishes of the States
    The people of Alaska have seen what happens . The People of Florida and the Gulf Coast are still recovering
    Thanks but no thanks
    http://dec.alaska.gov/spar/ppr/bigspills.htm
    10/05/1976 USNS Sealift Pacific Cook Inlet jet fuel
    395,640
    12/25/1979 M/V Lee Wang Zin Dixon Entrance (SE Alaska) bunker oil
    200,000
    01/24/1984 M/V Cepheus Cook Inlet jet fuel
    180,012
    07/02/1987 T/V Glacier Bay Cook Inlet crude
    207,000
    11/02/1988 M/V Alaska Constructor
    Cook Inlet gasoline 10,000
    diesel
    30,000
    11/14/1988 Marathon Spark Platform Cook Inlet crude
    46,000
    01/03/1989 T/V Thompson Pass Port Valdez crude
    71,400
    01/11/1989 F/V Chil Bo San Aleutians diesel

    65,000
    03/24/1989 T/V Exxon Valdez Prince William Sound crude
    11,000,000
    08/19/1989 Tug Boat Lorna B Cook Inlet diesel
    80,000
    11/17/1990 Little Diomede Tank Farm Bering Strait diesel
    31,000
    01/03/1992 Pipeline Rupture, Port Nikiski Cook Inlet crude
    9,500
    05/21/1994 T/V Eastern Lion Port Valdez crude
    8,400
    08/10/1994 Cape Nome Construction Barge Cape Nome diesel
    20,000
    07/22/1995 Fish Processor Northern Wind Aleutians diesel
    15,000
    12/05/1995 Tesoro Refinery, tank overfill Cook Inlet crude
    5,700
    03/06/1997 Steelhead Platform Cook Inlet diesel
    9,000
    11/26/1997 M/V Kuroshima Aleutians bunker oil
    39,000
    08/04/2001 F/V Windy Bay Prince William Sound diesel
    35,000
    12/08/2004 M/V Selendang Ayu Aleutians IFO 380
    321,052
    diesel
    14,680

  4. Avatar for sooner sooner says:

    After Florida Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican, met with Zinke, the secretary announced that drilling would be “off the table” for waters in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean off Florida.

    Washington, Oregon and California want the same. Let them drill off the coasts of Alabama, South Carolina and Texas.

  5. Avatar for tao tao says:

    Oil is a dying industry. Sea food harvesting has a much brighter future in Alaska, assuming the Arctic Ocean survives. The fossil fuel corporations will take as much oil and leave as big a mess as these deregulating fools will allow.

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