National Petroleum Reserve - Alaska

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Photo Credit: Gary Braasch
KEY FACTS
  • Size: 23.5 million acres – the largest single unit of public lands in the nation, roughly the size of Indiana.
  • Protection History: 1923 – President Harding set aside Reserve lands under the US Navy. 1976 – administration of the Reserve was transferred to the Department of Interior.
  • Most Recent Protection: President Obama protected 11 million acres of Special Areas in the Reserve through a comprehensive management planning process.
  • Oil and Gas Development Threats: ConocoPhillips currently owns a majority of leases held in the Reserve, is producing oil in one unit, and is moving forward with two more production units continuing on the sprawl of development into the Reserve.
  • Climate Change: Rising Arctic temperatures are leading to melting permafrost, receding sea ice, coastal erosion, changes in vegetation growth patterns, altered caribou migration routes, increased forest fires, shrinking lakes, and more.
  • Wildlife: The Reserve contains critical habitat for millions of migratory birds, as well as grizzly bears, walrus, wolves, endangered beluga whales, and caribou.
  • Significance to Alaska Natives: Alaska Natives live off these lands and waters, and the Reserve provides vital subsistence resources to its surrounding communities. Places like Nuiqsut, on the eastern edge of the Reserve, are experiencing increased health impacts from the oil and gas activities surrounding the community.

The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (Reserve) is the largest single unit of public lands in the nation. Encompassing 22 million acres, the Reserve harbors rich and vital wild lands and wildlife, important in their own right and to the Inupiat people of Alaska’s North Slope for their subsistence culture. President Harding established the Naval Petroleum Reserve-Alaska in 1923. Congress transferred management of the area from the Navy to the Interior Department in 1976 and required the Secretary of Interior to provide “maximum protection” for its critical biological and cultural resources.

In 2013, the Department of the Interior (DOI) adopted a management plan that received strong public support and put in place sensible conservation protections for 11 million acres in the Reserve, setting aside five Special Areas of exceptional wildlife and wilderness value: Teshekpuk Lake, Colville River, Utukok River Uplands, Kasegaluk Lagoon and Peard Bay. DOI spent years working with the tribal community, local governments, the state of Alaska, the Western Arctic Caribou Herd Working Group and the public on the current management plan. The vast majority of commenters supported strong protections for key areas and resources.

Now DOI has started an environmental review process likely seeking to undo protections put in place under the Obama administration in Reserve Special Areas. One of the reasons the Trump administration is moving to open up protected areas in the Reserve is ConocoPhillips interest in more acreage within the Teshekpuk Lake Special Area. ConocoPhillips is doubling down on development in the Reserve, pushing forward with current projects and buying hundreds of thousands of acres for future development, continuing to build upon its growing spider web of oil and gas development projects.


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Talking Points

  • Protecting the NPRA’s special areas, wildlife, and natural values is required by law. The NPRA is federal land with a multi-use mandate, including energy development and conservation. When the Navy transferred the NPRA to the Department of the Interior, Congress wrote a specific law for this land that called protecting wildlife, surface resources, and special areas, including conservation. Congress called out Teshekpuk Lake as a special area worthy of maximum protection.
  • Science drove the development of the current land management plan. The 2013 plan represented a big leap forward in our understanding of the science and spatial data, and the area protected under this plan reflects this greater scientific understanding. The public record leading up to the 2013 IAP contains strong justification for recognizing and protecting special areas and wildlife. New scientific understanding has added to the rationale for protecting these areas.
  • There is substantial exploration and development across the Arctic and in the NPRA. This development is already causing impacts to fish, wildlife, subsistence, and other values. Re-doing the current management plan now is unnecessary and strains our federal resources in Alaska. We should instead focus on studying the impacts from today’s development, in order to make better informed decisions moving forward.

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