House Dems now propose leasing within NPR-A

July 11, 2008
US House Democrat leaders said they would increase available domestic oil and gas acreage by ordering the US Bureau of Land Management to begin leasing tracts within the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.

Nick Snow
Washington Editor

WASHINGTON, DC, July 11 -- US House Democrat leaders said they would increase available domestic oil and gas acreage by ordering the US Bureau of Land Management to begin leasing tracts within the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.

"Let's be clear: Democrats support increasing the domestic production of petroleum and our other energy resources," said Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.) June 10. "However, what continues to be missed is this: Today, there are 68 million acres in the United States that oil producers have permits to drill on. There are another 20 million acres in the NPR-A, an area set aside by Congress for oil drilling, that could be leased."

The combined 88 million acres would be roughly equal in size to Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and about two thirds of Maryland, "an enormous amount of land on which drilling could take place. And we believe such drilling should occur," he told reporters at a briefing.

The proposal to require annual lease sales within the NPR-A will be part of a legislative package that also will include requiring holders of existing leases to develop their tracts more quickly, re-imposing a ban on exporting Alaskan crude oil, and asking US President George W. Bush to enable construction of natural gas and oil pipelines from Alaska as soon as possible, Hoyer said.

Election-year interest
Republicans promptly dismissed the NPR-A leasing proposal as a poor substitute for authorizing leasing on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge's coastal plain. Don Young (R-Ak.), the Natural Resources Committee's ranking minority member, said that while he appreciates Hoyer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's (D-Calif.) "election-year interest in America's energy crisis," the proposal contains several flaws.

"The oilfields in the NPR-A are scattered over 23 million acres, and most of them are much further from the existing pipeline than the 2,000-acre field in ANWR would be. If location is important to Majority Leader Hoyer, than ANWR should be his top choice," Young said.

The US Department of the Interior has disputed House Democrats' assertions that oil companies already have permits to drill on 68 million acres, he continued. DOI also has said that opening NPR-A to leasing immediately would bypass the planning processes of the National Environmental Policy Act and BLM's land use. Finally, all lands in the NPR-A that are available to be leased under current BLM planning documents have been offered in the past or will be offered before yearend, Young said.

"Majority Leader Hoyer is saying the Democratic energy plan is to put oilfields up for lease that have already been leased, or will be in the next 5 months. That's not an energy plan; it's a total misunderstanding of the energy leasing process," the US House member from Alaska maintained.

House Minority Whip Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) noted that while US Geological Survey estimates show that the 10.6 billion bbl of recoverable oil within the NPR-A are 200 million bbl more than along ANWR's coastal plain, there are only 281,600 bbl/sq mile available in the NPR-A compared with 3.5 million bbl/sq mile within ANWR's Area 10-02. Available infrastructure for NPR-A deposits is negligible, with some areas more than 250 miles from an existing pipeline compared with 75 miles in the ANWR proposed tracts, he said.

GOP road trip planned
Meanwhile, House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) announced he will lead a GOP delegation of 10 other House Republicans to Colorado and Alaska next week to highlight solutions for helping reduce gasoline prices and dependence on foreign crude oil. He said the group will visit the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo., on July 18 and Alaska's North Slope on July 20, stops that will promote the "All of the above" approach Republicans favor.

"Policies not widely embraced when gasoline was $2/galsuch as oil exploration on a tiny patch of Alaska's vast North Slopenow enjoy the American people's overwhelming support in the face of $4/gal [gasoline]," Boehner said. "At the same time, the future of American energy is in alternative and renewable fuels, which is why we must encourage new and emerging technologies such as those developed at the renewable energy lab we will tour outside Denver," he continued.

House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel (Ill.) sent a letter to Boehner saying he hopes the group also visits the NPR-A while in Alaska. "The [US] Energy Information Administration estimates that even under the most optimistic scenarios, any new drilling in ANWR would save consumers less than 2 ¢/gal. Furthermore, it would take at least 10 years for any oil from the refuge to come online. In contrast, the NPR-A is home to more than 20 million acres that are currently ready to be drilled. Additional, the [USGS] estimates that there are 10.6 billion bbl of recoverable oil in the NPR-A," he said.

Boehner wrote that he was "surprised and pleased" to learn the House Democrat leadership supports oil and gas exploration in NPR-A in light of the intention of H.R. 6, passed last year, to prevent increased energy production in the NPR-A.

"If you and other Democrats are now indicating a willingness to reverse your policy on NPR-A and allow energy production in this area, Republicans will certainly work with you to do so as part of a comprehensive energy strategy that also includes environmentally responsible drilling in other critical untapped regions of our country such as ANWR and deep ocean energy zones far off our shores; increased conservation, and accelerated development of alternative fuels," he told Emanuel.

Contact Nick Snow at [email protected].