28% of Alaska Reserve’s Recoverable Oil Declared Off-Limits
Newsmax
Outgoing Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has
signed a directive placing 28 percent of the “estimated economically
recoverable oil” in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve off-limits to
oil exploration.
The Record of Decision signed by Salazar marks the first time a plan has been put into effect to regulate all of the Reserve.
The action “allows the development of 72 percent
of the estimated economically recoverable oil in the nearly
23-million-acre Reserve, while protecting the vital subsistence
resources of Alaska Natives and the habitat of world-class wildlife
populations,” the Interior Department said in a statement.
The plan protects “critical areas for sensitive
bird populations” and for “the roughly 400,000 caribou” in parts of the
Reserve, the statement asserts.
The statement does not disclose that 28 percent of the Reserve is now closed to development. Simple math does.
The Reserve was set aside by President Warren
Harding in 1923 as an emergency oil supply for the U.S. Navy. It was
transferred to the Department of the Interior in 1976 and is now known
as the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.
Republicans were quick to criticize Salazar’s move.
Rep. Doc Hastings of Washington, chairman of the
House Natural Resources Committee, said in a statement: “Only in
President Obama’s backwards worldview of anti-energy policies does it
make sense to prohibit energy production in a place specifically set
aside for energy production at a time when gasoline prices are
skyrocketing.”
The village of Nuiqsut, a mostly Alaska Native
community in the Reserve, had requested that more land south of nearby
Teshekpuk Lake be made available for drilling leases, but the request
was ignored by the Interior Department, CNS News reported.
Sen. Mark Begich of Alaska said: “No one disputes
the importance of Teshekpuk Lake to waterfowl and caribou, but I think
we should listen most closely to those who live there and depend on
these critical subsistence resources as well as the economic opportunity
resource development can bring.”
Salazar, who oversaw a moratorium on offshore
drilling after the BP oil spill and promoted alternative energy sources
throughout the nation, is stepping down this month.
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