Alaska's "pristine" wildlife refuge |
By Alan Caruba
Fifty
million Americans who live in the northeast will experience what is predicted
to be a historic blizzard from Monday evening through Tuesday. Cities and towns will virtually or literally close down. People will be
told to stay indoors for their safety and to facilitate the crews that will
labor to clear the roads of snow.
In other
words, welcome to Alaska, a place that is plenty cold most of the year and
which is no stranger to snow and ice.
Alaska,
however, has something that the whole world considers very valuable; oil and natural
gas. Lots of it. In 1980 a U.S. Geological Survey estimated that the Coastal
Plain could contain up to 17 billion barrels of oil and 34 trillion cubic feet
of natural gas.
In 1987,
the U.S Department of Interior confirmed the earlier estimate, saying that “in
place resources” ranged from 4.8 billion to 29.4 billion barrels of oil.
Recoverable oil estimates ranged from 600 million barrels at the low end to 9.2
billion barrels at the high end.
A nation
with an $18 trillion debt might be expected to want to take advantage of this
source of revenue, but no, not if that debt was driven up by the idiotic
policies of President Barack Obama and not if it could be reduced by the same
energy industry that has tapped similar oil and natural gas reserves in the lower 48 states by
drilling on private, not public lands.
Instead,
on Sunday President Obama referred to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
(ANWR) as “an incredible place—pristine, undisturbed. It supports caribou and
polar bears” and other species and, guess what, tapping its vast oil and
natural gas reserves would not interfere in any way with those species despite
the whopping lie that “it’s very fragile.”
At Obama’s
direction, the Interior Department announced it was proposing to preserve as
wilderness nearly 13 million acres of land in ANWR’s 19.8 million-acre area. That
would include 1.5 million acres of coastal plains that Wall Street Journal
reported to be “believed to have rich oil and natural gas reserves.”
Not a
whole lot of people choose ANWR as a place to vacation. It is a harsh, though
often beautiful, area that only the most experienced visitor might want
to spend some time. I would want to make every environmentalist who thinks any
drilling would harm the area have to take up residence in its “pristine”
wilderness to confirm that idiotic notion.
They would
find plenty of caribou, polar bears and other species hanging out amidst the
oil and gas rigs, and along the pipe line. The Central Arctic Caribou Herd that
migrates through the Prudhoe Bay oil field, just next to ANWR has increased
from 5,000 animals in the 1970s to more than 50,000 today. There is no evidence
than any of the animal species have experienced any decline.
The
Coastal Plain lies between known major discovery areas and the Prudhoe Bay,
Lisburne, Endicott, Milne Point and Kuparuk oil fields are currently in
production In 1996, the North Slope oil fields produced about 1.5 million
barrels of oil per day or approximately 25% of the U.S. domestic production.
Alaska is permitted to export its oil because of its high levels of
productivity.
So why has
Obama’s Department of the Interior decided it wants to shut off energy
exploration and extraction in a whopping 13-million acres of what is already designated
as a wildlife refuge and along its coastlines on the Beaufort and Chukchi seas? The
answer is consistent with Obama’s six years of policies to deny Americans the
benefits of the nation's vast energy reserves, whether it is the coal that has
previously provided 50% of our electrical energy—now down by 10%--or access to
reserves of oil and natural gas that would make our nation energy independent
as well as a major exporter.
The good
news is that only Congress has the authority to declare an area as wilderness.
It has debated the issue for more than 30 years and in 12 votes in the House
and 3 votes in the Senate it has passed legislation supporting development and
opposing the wilderness designation.
And guess
who is the new chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee?
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, an Alaskan Republican. She also heads up the
appropriations subcommittee responsible for funding the Interior Department!
This
latest Obama ANWR gambit is going to go nowhere. It does, however, offer the
Republican Congress an opportunity to demonstrate its pro-energy credentials.
“I cannot
understand why this administration is willing to negotiate with Iran, but not
Alaska,” said Sen. Murkowski when informed of Obama’s latest attack.
© Alan
Caruba, 2015
The real question everyone should be asking is this. Just exactly why do we need a Department of the Interior? The answer of course is because the federal government owns between 25 and 30 percent of the interior. Now we should be asking ourselves why does the federal government need to own all that land and why don't they sell it and pay off the national debt?
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