Federal Obstruction

5-25-12 - Alaskans 'Rocked' At Last Night's BLM Hearing!

25 May 2012 7:53am

Alaskans Rocked At Last Night's BLM Hearing!

Commentary by

Dave Harbour

Last night, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) held a hearing in Anchorage to gather comment on its Draft Integrated Activity Plan and Environmental Impact Statement (IAP/EIS) for the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A).  The Interior Department agency proposed four alternative approaches to managing NPR-A.  As many as a hundred had gathered in the Science Center of the BLM's Campbell Creek facility to listen or testify.  Twenty-one Alaskans enthusiastically supported oil and gas leasing of the nation's oil and gas reserve ("Alternative #4") while nine witnesses argued for restrictions on oil, gas, mineral and pipeline activity within the oil and gas designated reserve ("Alternative #2").  (Note: see more event photos below, balance to be uploaded by C.O.B. 5-31-12)

Putting size into context:

Alaska is twice as big as Texas, but with a Alaska Map Over Lower 48, Alaska is 20% size of nation, Alaska has 75 percent of America's coastlinepopulation about like Dallas.  

 

 

 

 

The NPR-A is a Maine-sized area that lies on the northern coast of Alaska.  

The Obama Administration is also determining how best to block oil and gas access to a 2,000 acre oil and gas exploration area (i.e. about the size of Dulles Airport) within a Congressionally-designated oil and gas area (i.e. "1002 area") that itself lies within the 19 million acre area.  

This Dulles Airport-sized oil and gas area lies within the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), which is about, the size of South Carolina.

The North Slope Borough, seat of local government for northern Alaska, is the largest local government in the country and embraces these state-sized areas with a population of less than 10,000.

Producing oil from these areas will have little effect on the environment and some of that effect is very positive--as the Prudhoe Bay experience has shown with a multiplying caribou herd and diminished calf mortality.

-dh

Bud Cribley, BLM, Photo by Dave HarbourWhile BLM's Alaska director, Bud Cribley (NGP Photo), was present, Arctic Field Office Manager Lon Kelly (NGP Photo) provided the opening briefing.  Overall, we believe this was the most professionally conducted Federal hearing we've seen in this state for some time.  Kelly and his colleagues Lon Kelly, BLM, Arctic, Alaska, NPR-A, Photo by Dave Harboururged witnesses to stay within a 3 minute time limit and enforced the schedule with a discrete, electronic 'bell'.  Witnesses were called in the order they signed the list.  This process is in sharp contrast to other Department of Interior agency hearings over the last few years when certain witnesses exceeded a three or five minute 'limit' by as much as twenty minutes; when facilitators let audience agitators push them into allowing witnesses to speak out of turn; and, when comment periods were extended when pro development viewpoints appeared to dominate anti development voices.

As near as we can remember with help from Carl Portman of the Resource Development Council from Alaska (RDC), the following individuals testified, among others: Steve Pratt, CEA-AK (NGP Photo-L), Ed Fogels, DNR (NGP Photo-below); Maynard Tapp); Jim Arlington, Linc Energy; Dave Harbour; Kara Moriarty, AOGA (NGP Photo-L); Carl Portman, RDC; Richard 

Kara Moriarty, AOGA, Alaska Oil and Gas Association, BLM, OCS, NPR-A, Photo by Dave Harbour

Garrard (NGP Photo below), Petroleum Geoscientist; Jeff Landfield (Legislative Candidate);  Rocky DippelBen MohrKatherine Hicks; State Senator Cathy Giessel; State Representative Lance Pruitt; Lorali Simon; Joe Liska, NANA; Jeff Turner, State Representative Charisse Millett’s office; Pauline Ruddy, Shell; Brent Senette, CH2M HILL; Anand Dubey, Legislative Candidate; Mary Barr; David Brown, ConocoPhillips (NGP Photo-below).

While we appreciated the process, some of Kelly's observations seemed to indicate an agency bias against petroleum development within the Petroleum Reserve.  In his opening, he indicated that "new insights" required analysis, including air quality modeling, climate change and blowing dust from China.  To a non-scientist, this looks much like a pretext for a full-employment program for programmers, botanists, biologists, climatologists, university staff and government bureaucrats.

See Wesley Loy's Petroleum News report of the hearing here.

He said he was concerned about a duck hen with a brood of chicks getting run over on an elevated gravel pad.  I did not laugh but made a mental note of the scores of times I'd seen slow moving traffic at Prudhoe bay stop to let caribou or birds traverse the roadway--unlike Anchorage where dozens of waterfowl and scores of moose are killed every year on our more civilized roads, 800 miles south of the Petroleum Reserve.  

Kelly said he wanted to "consider" United States Geological Survey (USGS) oil and gas estimates that have been substantially reduced.  In my testimony later, I pointed out that estimates were relatively meaningless without exploration and drilling (Also, see Richard Girrard's testimony, below).  I tried to describe why alternative #4 should be employed to reasonably determine what resources were in the area.  If a bureaucrat says, "I need to consider USGS' reduced estimates," that is a pretty good indication that the agency wants to say, "Why lease the area when nothing's there."  It is an argument the environmental armies use all the time, most notably in opposing development on 2,000 of ANWR's 19 million acres.  Logically, if there is little or nothing to be found, few bidders will want leases and few leases will be acted upon.  If no oil is present, no development will occur.  The argument that an area shouldn't be leased because government estimates of petroleum volume are low, therefore, is not logical and is specious.  Kelly also said that "certain areas" of the Petroleum Reserve are thought to have little oil and gas.  That sentiment seems like another pretext for deciding later not to lease certain areas and to move in favor of low development alternatives.

Kelly concluded by noting that the comments from hearings would be complied by July 6 and a final EIS produced by November 16, followed by Secretarial approval on December 17.  (On 5/30/12 BLM's Bridget Psarianos emailed hearing participants that the comment period has been extended to June 15.  We hope that extension is motivated more by a desire to honestly obtain more valuable testimony, and not to provide environmental activists more time to order seminar writers throughout the country to pad the record with 'do not develop petroleum in the petroleum reserve' letters.  Pardon us for this suspicion but based on this Administration's treatment of Alaska natural resources issues for the last nearly four years, we have significant justification for our suspicions.  We further note that a final action restricting petroleum related access to significant portions of the nation's Petroleum Reserve could occur weeks before a new Administration gained control of the White House.)

Your writer asked Kelly about buffers along the coast, showing on his maps.  Citizens should be concerned that even if all of the Petroleum Reserve were available for Petroleum leasing and exploration, any banning of activity around the borders of the Reserve could prevent a pipeline accessing new producing areas of the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas from directly and efficiently connecting to the Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS).  His answer confirmed the presence of buffer zones on the Petroleum Reserve's northern coast.

In other testimony:

  • Pauline Ruddy (NGP Photo) testified that: "Although several options exist for transporting Paulene Ruddy, Shell, Photo by Dave Harbouroil and gas from the Chukchi Sea OCS to market, the preferred alternative is a pipeline from the Chukchi Sea to shore and then across the North Slope to the Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS).  The management of the NPR-A, which encompasses much of the North Slope, is therefore of great importance, and could affect and/or potentially prevent the transportation of oil and gas resources to market through TAPS.  Although the “Purpose and Need” section of the draft EIS states that one of its purposes is to ensure that BLM’s land management practices in the NPR-A will provide the opportunity to construct the necessary pipelines and support structures to bring Chukchi Sea oil and gas resources to TAPS, it provides no description or analysis of such an event.  Additionally three of the four proposed Alternatives have significant restrictions in the form of Special Areas, Wild and Scenic Rivers, stipulations, required operating procedures (ROPs), and best management practices (BMPs), and limits on non-subsistence infrastructure that could greatly impact Chukchi Sea leaseholder’s ability to permit and construct  a pipeline across NPR-A to TAPS.  I want to stress that the proposals in Alternative B would essentially prohibit development of a pipeline to transfer hydrocarbons to TAPS, and Alternatives A and C could also greatly restrict options for a viable transportation route.  Alternative D as assessed would have more allowances for a multiuse of the NPRA and better accommodate the critical infrastructure to bring much needed oil to TAPS.  Ruddy Testimony.
  • Jeff Landfield  (NGP Photo) said the benefits of resource development included an economic multiplier effect.
  • Maynard Tapp (NGP Photo) said, "NPR-A should be made available for oil and gas Maynard Tapp, Hawk Consultants, NPR-A, OCS, Alaska, BLM, Photo by Dave Harbourexploration and development for the following reasons: The United States is in a vulnerable position related to world energy consumption. Oil imports have risen by 20% over the last few years. At the same time U.S. oil production has declined by 14-16%. We continue to import over 59% of our oil. Where and what is our energy policy?  Opposition to oil and gas exploration and production here in Alaska impacts jobs in Alaska, and in the Lower 48. It is also a threat to our nation’s security."  (Tapp Testimony)
  •  
  • Though out of the room when called to speak, Katherine Hicks said, "I think that Alternative D is the only choice for Alaska, unless the Federal Government and BLM would chose to return the NPR-A to Alaska and let us run it as we know it should be run. This would enable us to supply energy to our state and others,  keep TAPS running and help to reduce the debt that our government has run up."... I urge the BLM to adopt Alternative D and would add that you also allow us to drill, mine and take advantage of the bounty God blessed this country with."
  • Richard Garrard testified (NGP Photo), "So what can be done in the NPR-A to stimulate renewed Richard Garrard, NPR-A, Alaska, OCS, Geoscientist, geologist, oil and gas exploration, BLM testimonyexploration and for Alaska to reap the benefits of urgently needed new production? Firstly, open-up the most prospective areas to responsible exploration while protecting the environment through sensible regulation. Secondly, the BLM must think and plan beyond just conducting ever diminishing lease sales by thinking production and what is required to commercially enable current and future discoveries to deliver their products to TAPS. “Alternative D” is the only option that will allow this to happen and in the best interest of both the State of Alaska and the Nation this must be adopted."  (Garrard Testimony)
  • Speaking for Alaska Representative Charisse Millett, Jeff Turner testified that: "THE NATIONAL PETROLEUM RESERVE ALASKA WAS CREATED SPECIFICALLY FOR OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT.  THAT IS WHY REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT SUPPORTS ALTERNATIVE D IN THE BLM’S DRAFT INTEGRATED ACTIVITY PLAN AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT.  FIRST OF ALL… ALTERNATIVE D RECOGNIZES WHY THE RESERVE WAS CREATED IN THE FIRST PLACE.  OPENING THE ENTIRE REFUGE TO PETROLEUM EXPLORATION, ALONG WITH EXPLORATION IN THE CHUKCHI SEA CAN USHER IN A NEW ERA OF NORTH SLOPE OIL PRODUCTION.  THROUGHPUT IN THE TRANS-ALASKA PIPELINE SYSTEM IS NOW 600,00 BARRELS A DAY, DOWN FROM TWO MILLION A DAY… AND THERE ARE NO NEW FIELDS COMING ON LINE THAT CAN REVERSE THAT DECLINE CURVE.  (Turner Testimony)
  • RDC's Carl Portman said, "Given NPR-A is a petroleum reserve, BLM should manage the area in a manner that facilities oil and gas production and the development of vital infrastructure for both onshore and offshore development. The significant enlargement of Special Areas and proposed Wild and Scenic River designations, as recommended in Alternative B, could affect the ability of onshore and offshore operators in federal and state waters to lease areas for development, as well as build and operate infrastructure necessary to transport oil and gas in an efficient manner to market.  In addition, such designations would likely diminish the potential recovery of much needed energy resources for Alaska and the nation.  Alaska and the federal government have already designated significant portions of the state for conservation purposes.  In fact, Alaska contains 90 percent of all national park lands, more than 80 percent of national wildlife refuge lands, and more than half of all federally-designated Wilderness. The Special Areas proposed for NPR-A are essentially de-facto wilderness that could block exploration of some of the most prospective areas of the energy reserve or its Special Areas."  (Portman Testimony)
  • Jim Arlington testified, "Under the provisions of the Naval Petroleum Reserves Production Act of 1976 (“NPRPA”), the Secretary of the Interior is required to conduct oil and gas leasing AND provide for the oil and gas development within the NPR-A.  While the Secretary is also required to manage all activities within the petroleum reserve and promulgate regulations that appropriately protect the “environment, fish and wildlife, historical and scenic values”, this does not mean that these values are to be protected at the expense of oil and gas development."  (Arlington Testimony

In our own testimony, we urged the BLM leadership to more forcefully execute and advocate its mission to responsibly develop NPR-A.  We urged the agency, as it approached its final drafting process, to incorporate socio-economic effects on Alaska and the nation of restricting petroleum exploration and development within the Nation's petroleum reserve.  We urged BLM to subsume into its record the extensive studies of Alaskan Arctic Gas Study Company, summarized in its 40 volume "Biological Report Series" submitted to the Secretary of Interior in the mid 1970s.  We noted that extensive studies demonstrated the compatibility of reasonable development with summer migratory species.  We noted that one of the largest causes of caribou calf mortality was caused by the hoards of mosquitos populating the low-lying marshy areas.  In an hour, mosquitos can reduce a sedentary calf to almost skin and bones; this is likely why Mother Nature has equipped calfs to begin running within minutes of birth.   We said that the Prudhoe Bay experience has proven that the elevated gravel production pads and roads provide a windy relief from mosquitos and that the caribou population at Prudhoe Bay has sextupled due in large part to the presence of the oil industry.  I therefore urged BLM to incorporate the positive experience of Prudhoe Bay into its findings.  That experience demonstrates that man's reasonably managed presence on the Slope has resulted in more net benefits to nature than deficits.  I would add here that the "entire suite of values" will not have been considered without BLM's incorporating and fully considering the 1) socio-economic effects of restricting NPR-A petroleum activity, 2) the Arctic Gas Biological Report Series, and 3)the Prudhoe Bay experience.  

We conclude that Alaskans "rocked" last night: not the paid environmental activists whose living is based on creating controversy and lawsuits, but the many Alaskans (i.e. most are NGP readers) who turned out to defend their way of life and opportunities for their kids.  Yes, several were employed directly or indirectly by oil companies.  But virtually all were there after hours on their own dime, taking their own time to express a personal viewpoint.   We were also impressed that three legislators were represented along with two legislative candidates and Governor Parnell's representative.  We only lament that the entire Legislature, many assembly members and mayors and school board members didn't show up to defend petroleum development in Alaska's petroleum reserve at a time with TAPS is 2/3 empty, declining at a 6-7% annual rate.  

We also lament that only one political party was represented by all the elected and appointed government officials.  Alaskans deserve equal defense of our way of life from both republicans and democrats.  

Even so, one can accurately conclude that last night in defense of our way of life, Alaskans Rocked!   -dh

(Note:  Since our goal is provision of accurate facts and reports, we always invite readers to suggest specific language that corrects any error we might inadvertently make.  If editorial criticism is offered, we will often include that upon request.  Though our editorial policy strongly supports free enterprise, reasonable and robust exploration and development, we will post both pro- and anti-leasing testimony that witnesses may wish to provide.)


Event Photos will be uploaded here by C.O.B. on 6-01-12.

Ed Fogels, Alaska Department of Natural Resources, BLM, NPR-A, Photo by Dave Harbour

 

Ed Fogels

David Brown, COP, ConocoPhillips, National Petroleum Reserve Alaska, NPR-A, Photo by Dave Harbour

 

David Brown

 

 


 
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT NEWS RELEASE
Alaska State Office, Office of Communications
Release Date: 05/29/12
Contacts: Artealia Gilliard, 907-271-4418, agilliard@blm.gov
Ruth McCoard, 907-271-3322, rmccoard@blm.gov
News Release No. 12-13
 
Comment Period for National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska Draft Plan extended to June 15th
ANCHORAGE - BLM-Alaska will extend the comment period for the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska Draft Integrated Activity Plan and Environmental
Impact Statement to June 15, 2012.
 
“The plan is complex and will guide important decisions about the future management of the NPR-A,” said BLM-Alaska State Director Bud Cribley. “We have received requests from several stakeholders requesting we extend the comment period. We decided that we could balance the need to complete the plan in a timely manner and the need to be responsive to our stakeholders by extending the comment period for an additional two weeks.”
 
The Draft IAP/EIS proposes four alternative future management strategies for the NPR-A. This plan is the first plan that covers the entire NPR-A, including BLMmanaged lands in the southwest area of the NPR-A which were not included in previous plans. Decisions to be made as part of this plan include oil and gas leasing availability, surface protections, Wild and Scenic River recommendations, and Special Area designations.
 
Public comments will be accepted through June 15, 2012. Comments may be submitted:
· Online by accessing the BLM’s website at www.blm.gov/ak By mail to: NPR-A IAP/EIS Comments, AECOM Project Office, 1835 South Bragaw Street, Suite
490, Anchorage, AK 99508.
· By fax to (866) 611-942 or (907) 268-4224.
· By hand-delivering comments to AECOM at their Anchorage address listed above or to BLM’s Public Information Center in the Federal Building, 222 W. 7th
Ave., Anchorage.
· By speaking at public meetings on the draft IAP/EIS. There is one additional public meeting scheduled for June 5, 2012 in Point Lay, Alaska.
 
The comment period for the NPR-A Draft IAP/EIS began on March 30, 2012 and was to end on June 1, 2012. With the extension to June 15, the comment period will total 77 days. BLM Field and State Office staff hosted a total of eight public meetings over two weeks from May 14, 2012, through May 24, 2012, in North Slope villages and other locations. Additionally, another public meeting will be held in Point Lay on June 5, 2012, in conjunction with BLM’s previously scheduled Subsistence Advisory Panel meeting. This will provide an opportunity to comment to Point Lay residents who were engaged in subsistence whaling activities during the May 14, 2012 meeting. Public testimony from the meetings was recorded and will be included in the NPR-A IAP/EIS administrative record. These comments will be carefully considered in preparation of the Final EIS/IAP, along with other comments provided by the public and stakeholders.
 
If you have questions about the public comment process, please call Jim Ducker, BLM-Alaska Project Lead at (907) 271-3130.
###
The BLM manages more than 245 million acres of public land, the most of any Federal agency. This land, known as the National System of Public Lands, is primarily located in 12 Western states,
including Alaska. The BLM also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. In Fiscal Year (FY) 2011, recreational and other activities on BLM-managed land
contributed more than $130 billion to the U.S. economy and supported more than 600,000 American jobs. The Bureau is also one of a handful of agencies that collects more revenue than it
spends. In FY 2012, nearly $5.7 billion will be generated on lands managed by the BLM, which operates on a $1.1 billion budget. The BLM's multiple-use mission is to sustain the health,
diversity, and productivity of the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations. The Bureau accomplishes this by managing such activities as outdoor recreation,
livestock grazing, mineral development, and energy production, and by conserving natural, historical, cultural, and other resources on public lands.
--BLM--
Alaska State Office, Office of Communications 222 W 7th Avenue, #13 Anchorage, AK 99513
Last updated: 05-30-2012
USA.GOV | No Fear Act | DOI | Disclaimer | About BLM | Notices | Get Adobe Reader®

 

Categories:

5-24-12 Tonight's The (NPR-A) Night!

24 May 2012 7:14am

The Straight Good News, by Gillian Steward.  NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair might as well have declared war on the West.

Gov. Parnell says energy relief on its way to Fairbanks, but not right awayThe Republic


Tonight, BLM Officials Will Be Taking Testimony On A Ridiculous Question:

"Shall bureaucrats diminish or stop resource development In America's National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska at a time when gas prices are high, employment is low, TAPS is 2/3 empty, the national and state treasuries need more revenue, and when America has already designated NPR-A to be a National Petroleum Reserve--not a memorial to environmental extremism?"  Even the calmist, most reserved citizen must ask out of a sense of responsible outrage, "how utterly stupid, incompetent and economically suicidal can the Federal government and its environmental extremist allies get?" 

Last week we "Counted the ways Alaska is being assaulted by the Federal government".  Tonight, Steve Pratt, CEA, Consumer Energy Alliance Alaska, BOEM, OCS, RDC, ANWR, ACES, AGIA, Photo by Dave Harbourdoors open at 6 PM (but we'll arrive earlier) at the Campbell Creek Science Center in Anchorage for the Bureau of Land Management to take testimony on a management plan for the National Petroleum Reserve – Alaska.  Consumer Energy Alliance President, Steve Pratt (NGP Photo) observes that, "Despite the fact that federal law forbids the federal government from even studying setting aside additional areas as wilderness or special conservation areas, two of the options being proposed by BLM do just that."  Pratt told NGP that, "Alternative D is the alternative least likely to shut down oil and gas exploration in the Reserve and in the Chukchi Sea.  Please consider testifying at the hearing; at a minimum, please take a few minutes to register your views through the following link."  http://consumerenergyalliance.org/calls-to-action/allow-energy-access-in-the-alaskan-petroleum-reserve/.  

We urge readers in the Anchorage area should once again gather to show the flag and make sure the public record of this proceding reflects reasonable views of NPR-A's proper role in bolstering Alaska's economy and the country's national security.  -dh

Here is an instructive note from Carl Portman (NGP Photo), Resource Development Carl Portman, Resource Development Council for Alaska, BOEM, OCS, RDC, ANWRCouncil for Alaska:

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) will hold a public hearing this Thursday, May 24 at the Campbell Creek Science Center in Anchorage on the Draft Integrated Activity Plan and Environmental Impact Statement (IAP/EIS) for the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A). The meeting begins with an open house at 6 p.m., followed by the public hearing at 7 p.m.

RDC encourages you to attend and testify, presenting brief comments urging BLM to open all of the energy reserve's subsurface to oil and gas leasing, with balanced surface protections which do not preclude onshore development and transportation of potential offshore oil to the Trans-Alaska Pipeline.

Decisions to be made as part of this plan include oil and gas leasing availability, surface protections, Wild and Scenic River recommendations, and Special Area designations. The NPR-A IAP/EIS presents four alternative approaches for the planning effort.

Environmental groups are rallying their ranks to testify in favor of closing more than half of the reserve to oil development. The areas they want to see in special area designations (de-facto wilderness) are among the most prospective in NPR-A.

For comment points and additional information, please see the RDC Action Alert at:

http://www.akrdc.org/alerts/2012/draftnpraplanalert.html

Hope to see you at the hearing. I recommend arriving by 6:30 to sign-up early.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Consumer Energy Alliance links by Rebecca Brown:
 
 
 
And, from the American Energy Alliance this week:
 
Wall Street Journal (5/22/12) reports: Those who doubt that market forces still have the power to transform the world aren't paying attention to America's revitalized energy sector
 
Fuel Fix (5/23/12) reports: Automobile owners in the U.S. see fuel economy as the leading element they will consider in purchasing their next car, according to a survey by Consumer Reports…
 
The Hill (5/22/12) reports: Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is ramping up political pressure on Senate Republicans to drop the common practice of using legislative “holds” to block confirmation of top officials…“I think it is a crazy situation when the work of the people of the United States can’t get done because the Senate won’t confirm highly qualified people who are nominated and have great support,” Salazar said Tuesday…
 
National Journal (5/23/12) reports: No one needs to tell consumers about the importance of energy security. 
 
Roll Call(5/23/12) reports: President Barack Obama’s first Earth Day proclamation in 2009 was an urgent call to address global warming. This year? The word “climate” didn’t even get a mention...

CNN Money (5/24/12) reports: It doesn't feel like we're in Kansas anymore…Oil rigs are springing up in farmer's fields. "No vacancy" signs hang in the windows of local motels, and a steady stream of trucks barrel through Main Streets. Along the state's southern border, the once-quiet farm towns are quickly transforming into boomtowns… Hundreds of workers seeking high-paying jobs are flocking to places like Harper County, which had resorted to paying people to live there because of its declining population. Businesses are coming back from the dead and a housing shortage has caused rents to triple…Oil companies began exploring Southern Kansas over a year ago, seeing enormous potential in the area now that new technologies like horizontal drilling and fracking have made it possible to tap into the oil-rich Mississippian Limestone formation.
 
 Wall Street Journal (5/23/12) reports: Rising diesel costs last year forced Waste Management Inc. to charge customers an extra $169 million, just to keep its garbage trucks fueled. This year, the nation's biggest trash hauler has a new defensive strategy: it is buying trucks that will run on cheaper natural gas… 
Categories:

5-23-02

23 May 2012 6:51am

Dan Fagan, Alaska Radio and Television host, TV, talk radio, Photo by Dave HarbourWe'll joined Dan Fagan (NGP Photo-r) today on his radio show.  Our segment, Andrew Halcro, Avis car rental, legislator, Alaska House of Representatives, Photo by Dave Harbourshared with guest, Andrew Halcro (NGP Photo-L), followed an appearance by Governor Sean Parnell.  View the Parnell segment here by using the fast forward button to navigate to Hour: 1:36:11.  Our segment starts at: 2:07:45.  An earlier segment featured Jeff Jones, Governor Parnell's special assistant for natural resources.  -dh

House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Doc Hastings (NGP Photo) yesterday sent a letter to Washington State Congressman Doc Hastings, Chairman, Natural Resources, U.S. House of Representatives, Photo by Dave Harbourthe Department of the Interior’s Acting Inspector General (IG) Mary Kendall to question her about discrepancies between her testimony before the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources and documents recently provided to the Committee that suggest she was involved in the process of producing the report that recommended a six-month drilling moratorium in the Gulf of Mexico when she told the Subcommittee she was not.  

ADN by Lisa Demer.  A pro-development luncheon sponsored by Alaska business groups and featuring Gov. Sean Parnell among the speakers became a vehicle Tuesday to rally against the U.S. Environmental Chantell Sackett, EPA, Idaho, Federal Overreach, Supreme Court, Photo by Dave HarbourProtection Agency.  ...   The event was built around the private property rights case of an Idaho couple, Michael and Chantell Sackett (NGP Photos). They won a 9-0 decision before the U.S. Supreme Court in Michael Sackett, Wins EPA Supreme Court Challenge, Government overreach, Idaho, Photo by Dave Harbour, states rights, private property rights, 404, wetlandsMarch on a technical point. The ruling gives them the right to challenge in court a 2007 EPA decision designating their property as wetlands and blocking them from building a home on it. They are trying to work out a settlement.  The Supreme Court didn't rule on the bigger question of whether the EPA has the right to regulate their property as wetlands.  "I think the EPA is the biggest bully" but other federal agencies overreach as well, Michael Sackett, who lost his excavation company during the long battle with the EPA, asserted before a big crowd at the Dena'ina Civic and Convention Center. The couple got a standing ovation.  (Other event photos below.)

Michael and Chantell Sackett with Tom MaloneyMichael and Chantell Sackett with Tom Maloney

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Heather Brakes, Alaska State Senator Tom Wagoner, Photo by Dave HarbourSenator Tom Wagoner and Heather Brakes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

James Burling and John Sturgeon, pacific legal foundation, plf, sackett, 404, EPA, Photo by Dave Harbour

 James Burling and John Sturgeon

Categories:

5-22-12

22 May 2012 7:05am

Last week we "Counted the ways Alaska is being assaulted by the Federal government".  Today, Steve Pratt, Consumer Energy Alliance Alaska, Photo by Dave Harbourthe CEA Alaska President Steve Pratt (NGP Photo) tells us that, "This Thursday, May 24th, starting at 7 PM (doors open at 6 PM) at the Campbell Creek Science Center in Anchorage the Bureau of Land Management will be taking testimony on a management plan for the National Petroleum Reserve – Alaska.  Despite the fact that federal law forbids the federal government from even studying setting aside additional areas as wilderness or special conservation areas, two of the options being proposed by BLM do just that."  Pratt notes that, "Alternative D is the alternative least likely to shut down oil and gas exploration in the Reserve and in the Chukchi Sea.  Please consider testifying at the hearing; at a minimum, please take a few minutes to register your views through the following link."  http://consumerenergyalliance.org/calls-to-action/allow-energy-access-in-the-alaskan-petroleum-reserve/.  

See the excellent Resource Development Council for Alaska Notice Here.


Governor: Energy relief will come to Interior Alaska — eventually
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Sean Parnell told a meeting of Interior business leaders Monday. During a meeting with the Fairbanks chapter of the Alaska Support Industry Alliance, Parnell said the state and private industry are making promising strides forward with a liquid natural ...
See all stories on this topic »


Special Report Highlights Committee’s Investigation into Obama Admin Rewrite of Coal Reg That Could Cost Thousands of Jobs.  See Video Here!


Consumer Energy Alliance Energy Links of the Day:

 

The Keystone XL pipeline might be a good thing for job creation and overall crude oil supply, but the same positive effect on gasoline prices may not be coming. The 1,700-mile pipeline has been at the center of the debate between Republicans and Democrats over job creation, but according to a NPR StateImpact story, the pipeline might have a negative impact on gasoline prices in some areas including Texas. The reason is based on the premise that access to crude oil is uneven.
 
Businesses are reducing their energy consumption up to 25 percent in response to the recession, according to a Deloitte & Touche survey released today. A slow economic recovery has led businesses to target average reductions in energy consumption by nearly 25 percent over a three- to four-year period, Deloitte & Touche found in its annual ‘reSources 2012” survey. The bulk of these companies are setting goals for lower electricity usage and energy management practices as part of their business, with more than two-thirds saying that cost-cutting has been the main reason for doing so.
 
New York TimesKeystone Safety Measures (LTE)
Re “Confronting Keystone Again” (editorial, May 15), about TransCanada’s Keystone XL project: At TransCanada, safety is our No. 1 priority. Keystone XL will be built with the strongest steel and to higher safety standards than any pipeline in North America. Our plan has undergone well over three years of environmental review by numerous reputable federal and state agencies. The review was the most comprehensive process ever for a cross-border pipeline.
 
Washington PostOur cooling love affair with driving (Editorial)
Good news for Memorial Day weekend: Since peaking at a national average of $3.93 on April 5, the price of regular gasoline has fallen almost 25 cents per gallon. That’s like a $25 billion tax cut for consumers. In fact, gasoline is cheaper now than it was a year ago at this time. Futures markets are signaling further possible declines. All hail President Obama! Clearly his brilliant energy policy has gotten results, and fast.
 
U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-Metairie, is set to lead a bipartisan congressional delegation on a tour of offshore drilling facilities and to meet with energy industry representatives this Thursday and Friday. Scalise said that Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., will join him and three others to visit a drilling rig and an offshore oil production platform. According to Scalise's office, Rep. Gene Green, a Democrat from Houston, will also be there, along with Republicans Steven Palazzo of Mississippi and John Sullivan of Oklahoma.
 
Chad Porter wants to run his 18- wheeler trucks on frozen natural gas across Canada’s Rocky mountains even before the world’s longest chain of refueling stations gets built to keep them fueled. The chief operating officer of oil services company Ferus Inc. bought two vehicles to test liquefied natural gas and reckons switching from diesel may cut 22 percent from his fuel bill, or about $1 a gallon. At the moment, Calgary-based Ferus uses mobile tankers to refuel his trucks, which cost about C$100,000 ($99,000) more than conventional vehicles, adding expense to a project that’s about saving money. A Royal Dutch Shell Plc project will make it easier to fill up.

 

 

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5-16-12

16 May 2012 6:02am

Washington Times Op-Ed Today: Senators Lisa Murkowski and David Vitter.  TransCanada’s decision to reapply for a federal permit to build the Keystone XL pipeline across the U.S.-Canadian border offers President Obama something that rarely comes around - a second chance to do the right thing.


Calgary Herald by Dina O'Meara.  Oil and Gas Producers Keep Eye On Wildfires




Jim Jansen, Oil Taxes, ACES, Keep Alaska Competitive, Photo by Dave Harbour

AP/ADN by Becky Bohrer. Marc Langland, Keep Alaska Competitive, Oil Taxes, ACES, Northrim Bank, Photo by Dave Harbour Marc Langland (NGP Photo-R) and Jim Jansen (NGP Photo-L), co-chairs of the Make Alaska Competitive Coalition, in an email Tuesday, said they are not giving up on pressing for what they call meaningful tax reform, saying the state's economic future is at stake.

AP/ADN by Dan Joling.  "Four groups sue to protect Beluga Whales."  (Comment: Environmental activists within over three dozen resident NGOs in Alaska are working full time to oppose responsible natural resource activity Beluga Whale, Port Woronzof, Anchorage, Alaska, Photo by Dave Harbourin Alaska.  Since Alaska's constitution centers on a sustainable economy based on natural resources, the environmental groups are, in effect, calling for the bankrupting of Alaska.  Alaska's State Senate, by keeping oil taxes at a predatory level are, in effect, however indirectly, working with the environmental activists so intent on shutting down the state's free enterprise sector.  We spied a pod of (at least several dozen) spunky Beluga this past weekend at Point Woronzof (NGP Photo), while photographing a wedding.  Since Beluga populations are stable if not increasing we might have suggested to the headline writer this morning this alternative approach: Groups sue to stop energy production and most human commerce in Cook Inlet, the most populated section of Alaska.  -dh)  


Glen Biegel, KBYR, Talk Show, Photo by Dave HarbourYour author will appear this afternoon on Glen Biegel's (NGP Photo) radio show at 4 p.m. A.D.T..  Call in!    -dh

Shell Canada details BC liquefied natural gas project - Calgary Herald  -  Main callout pointer for calgaryheraldcom .... the province's growing natural gas reserves Thepipeline received a B.C. environmental assessment certificate ... www.calgaryherald.com/business/energy...C.../story.html
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5-14-12 - The Obama Administration Could Shut In The Nation's Petroleum Reserve in Alaska

14 May 2012 7:01am

AMA, Alaska Miners Association, Alaska Mining, Photo by Dave Harbour

 

The Alaska Mining Industry Is Honored -- Along with Bob Hoekzema, One Of Mining's StalwartSupporters (NGP Photo: Weekly AMA Meeting, 5-11-12.)

 Paul Jenkins says in his OP-Ed today that, "Without sensible oil tax reform, without more production, Alaskans will have to live with one eye on Alaska North Slope crude oil prices day to day and worry about the national and international vagaries and happenstance that drive them."

See the Alaska Gas Pipeline Federal Inspector News Briefs for Today!

Should Canada be less dependent on foreign oil?

Dan Fauske Says AGDC Still Has Much to Do | Radio Kenai - 5/14/12 The AGDC may not have received funding to take an in-state pipeline to an open season but ... radiokenai.net/fauske-says-agdc-still-has-much-to-do/

All-Alaska gasline the right move for today's market - Juneau Empire - By Sean Parnell Last fall I charted a new course to build a natural gas pipeline and deliver our resource to Alaskan homes and a global market. This new roadmap to a gasline established benchmarks that have been met and backstop our progress toward ...
See all stories on this topic »

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


"Alaska Is Being Assaulted: Let Me Count the Ways"

 
by 
 
Dave Harbour
 
Beginning today in Point Lay, Alaska and ending on May 24 in Anchorage, the BLM is holding hearings to seek public comment on the future of the Nation's Petroleum Reserve in Alaska (NPR-A).  
 
First created in 1923 as the Naval Petroleum Reserve Number 4, the area contains significant oil and gas resources.  The area was renamed in 1976 and management responsibilities transferred from the Department of the Navy to the Interior Department (DOI).
 
The BLM has created a Draft Integrated Activity Plan and Environmental Impact Statement (IAP/EIS) which contains four alternatives for NPR-A's future.  Alternatives A, B, and C embrace various levels of restricted access and activity while Alternative D would allow planning for natural resource development, including environmental safeguards.  
 
We believe the consumers of America along with the overall national interest are best served by Alternative D.  Here is an important analysis of the issues provided by the Resource Development Council for Alaska, and here is a link to the BLM notice.  We urge our readers to comment here and ALSO provide oral testimony at one of the upcoming meetings.
 
*     *     *    
 
Some of our newer readers may say of our title, "Isn't this a little bit of an overreaction?  Assaulted?  After all, we're just seeing routine regulatory processes, some hearings and a comment period.  It occurs during every administration."
 
We who have watched the actions of Alaska's Washington overlords for the past three+ years have compelling evidence that, a)  not one major natural resource decision from Washington has reasonably supported the sustainability of Alaska's economy, and b) the pattern of the Obama administration's regulation of Alaska activities has also been harmful to America's economy, national job creation, economic recovery, national defense, the balance of payments and energy security.  
 
Let us count the ways that calculating minds in the Federal capital are sapping the strength from America's largest, most well-endowed state:
 
1.  The NPR-A is an area the size of Maine, managed by the DOI's Bureau of Land Management(BLM).  The only significant environmental damage done in the area was perpetrated by the Federal government which has yet to clean up evidence of its own drilling activity, decades old.  Similar violations committed by private companies would have surely result in heavy fines.   Yet Washington at a time of financial and energy and employment crisis has resisted responsible development of NPR-A.  NPR-A is, for heaven's sake, a NATIONAL PETROLEUM RESERVE, yet the current proceeding could result in shutting in much or all of the NPR-A's future potential to supply domestic energy to our country. 
 
2.  The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, managed by the DOI's US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), is the size of North Carolina and mostly inaccessible wilderness.  Federal law permits oil and gas development on a small sliver on the coast (i.e. "1002 area"), with Congressional approval.  Exploration would occur in the winter when migratory species are absent.  In the adjacent Prudhoe Bay area, a different caribou herd has thrived and more than quadrupled, due partly to human protections.  Though Congress once granted approval for ANWR coastal plain development, President Clinton vetoed the bill in 1995.  The current Administration has not recommended Congressional approval and continues to consider making that coastal sliver, off limits.  Alaska has objected to USFWS steps to seek wilderness designations for the 1002 area within the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge’s 19 million acres that would prevent development of up to 16 billion barrels of oil.
 
3.  Alaska has vast oil and gas potential in the shallow water OCS areas of the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas, managed by the DOI's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM).  The current Administration has continually delayed providing necessary approvals for exploration.  It has used crafty, passive-aggressive techniques wherein one agency will play 'good cop' and another will be the 'bad cop' that denies a permit.  Again, this summer season, companies are poised to explore the leases for which they paid the Federal government billions.  There is no assurance that a combination of Federal obstruction and/or environmental lawsuits will not further delay this important work.
 
4.  The White House, via an Ocean Policy Executive Order that evades Congressional oversight and budget approval, has embarked on a two year crusade by the Council on Environmental Quality(CEQ) to put a huge matrix of regulatory controls over the nation's oceans, the waterways feeding them and the inland areas affecting those waterways.  This process would further erode states' rights and citizen freedom by laying a new net of federal control over already well-regulated water and land activity.
 
5.  Washington is designating an area over half the size of Texas as critical habitat for Alaska's polar bears, whose population is stable if not increasing.  This initiative could stop or limit otherwise legal, reasonable and logical human activity in a state twice the size of Texas with a total population (722,000) smaller than Fort Worth.  The Parnell Administration has vowed to fight “…Improper listings and critical habitat designations with sound science and cost data,” referring to efforts by DOI's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) to designate 187,166 square miles as a critical habitat for polar bears—an action Alaska and the Arctic Slope Regional Native Corporation believe will cost Alaskans hundreds of millions of dollars in economic potential.
 
6.  The State of Alaska sued the Secretary of the Interior in U.S. District Court to overturn the federal moratorium on offshore drilling in Alaska’s OCS, on grounds that the Obama administration violated federal law and acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner.
 
7.  Alaska challenged DOI's National Park Service regulations, claiming they violate federal law, usurp state sovereignty, and infringe the liberty of Alaskans.
 
8.  The State of Alaska petitioned The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to remove the eastern distinct population segment (DPS) of Steller sea lions from the list of species protected by the Endangered Species Act (ESA). NMFS is an agency of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Department of Commerce (DOC).
 
There is more we could say about assaults on Alaska.  We believe we are being subjected to an economic death by a thousand cuts.  And, there is much more we could say about similar Federal assaults occuring throughout America (i.e. Consider the USFWS current assault on Texas' economy via the "dunes sagebrush lizard" and EPA's sponsorship of economic distruction.)  
 
But in the spirit of 'one-step-at-a-time' we now focus on the NPR-A challenge and repeat our council to respond to the call to comment and to appear at the public meetings.  It is especially important that elected officials comment and verbally testify, as federal agencies frequently show deference to those of our readers elected to represent the rest of us.
 
Yes, federal actions seem contrived to wear down ordinary citizens and company analysts as well.  We seem to be on the receiving end every month of one initiative after the other to close down reasonable free enterprise and build up a bureaucratic oligarchy to enforce the multiplying array of costly and largely unnecessary regulations.
 
But we cannot give up.  If we stop appearing and commenting, the forces seeking to shut down commerce and our very way of life will own the preponderance of the legal record of these proceedings.  So, we take another deep breath, make another committment to comment, and work toward a better day.
 
End note:
 
2.We often repeat here our allegiance to factual content and urge our readers to provide us with specific suggestions for word changes in any of our news reports or editorials wherein facts are stated.  Thank you!  -dh

We congratulate the Alaska Miners Association for the noble service which has resulted in the following recognition from Alaska's Governor and Legislature:
 

Legislature Honors Bob Hoekzema

Senator Cathy Giessel presented a Bob Hoekzema, Alaska Senator Cathy Giessel, Alaska Miners Association, AMA, Photo by Dave HarbourCitation to Mr. Robert Hoekzema (NGP Photo), Alaska Miners Association at the Alaska Miners Association Anchorage Branch Breakfast on May 11, 2012, for his efforts and commitment in establishing open communication with the Alaska Miners Association Small Scale Miners Committee and the regulators for the State and Federal Agency in the State of Alaska.

The Department of Interior, Bureau of Land Management presented the committee with the 2011 Hardrock Miner Committee Outreach and Economic Security Award October 17, 2011. 

Governor Proclaims "Mining Day"

 

Senator Cathy Giessel presented a Deantha Crockett, Cathy Giessel, Alaska Senator, Jim Duffield, Alaska Miners Association, Mining Day, AMA, Photo by Dave Harbour2nd Mining Day Proclamation to the Alaska Miners Association (AMA) last Friday (May 11, 2012) at the weekly AMA meeting in Anchorage.  To receive this Proclamation was Deantha Crockett, Incoming Executive Director of the Alaska Miners Association and Jim Duffield (NGP Photo).  This act commemorates and represents the passing in Congress the General Mining Law of 1872 of the United States.
 

Lt. Governor Mead Treadwell Mead Treadwell, Alaska, Lieutenant Governor, Photo by Dave Harbour(NGP Photo-L)  presented . Steve Borell (NGP lower Photo), past Executive Director of the Alaska Miners Association, Steve Borell, Alaska Miners Association, AMA, Photo by Dave Harbourthe original Proclamation on May 10, 2011 at the Resource Development Council’s Annual Lunch.

 

 

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