Governor plans ANWR, NPR-A offshore leasing

April 1, 2004
Saying the State of Alaska will not submit to the dictates of America's extreme environmental community, Governor Frank H. Murkowski will begin planning oil and gas lease sales in state waters off the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska. He intends to have the lease sales included in a state offering in October.

Saying the State of Alaska will not submit to the dictates of America's extreme environmental community, Governor Frank H. Murkowski will begin planning oil and gas lease sales in state waters off the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska. He intends to have the lease sales included in a state offering in October.

Murkowski cited high energy prices and the nation's increasing hunger for natural gas as good reasons why Alaska needs to move on increased oil and gas development.

"Today I am initiating a leasing program on state lands, offshore in the Arctic, along the coast of ANWR and NPR-A," Murkowski said. "There are about 425 mi of coastline between Barrow and the Canadian border. That's just under two million acres in all.

The Northstar, Point McIntyre, and Endicott fields near Prudhoe Bay have already been leased and are producing oil.

With the national energy bill making uncertain progress in Congress, OPEC's continued stranglehold on production, and with anti-development forces in play in the presidential race, Murkowski said Alaska can no longer allow others to hold hostage the time at which Alaska will move its resources to market to benefit the nation. The governor said his plan allows the state to exercise its sovereign authority for offshore development, just as Texas and Louisiana are doing.

"The new areas to be offered for lease, exploration, and development are 670,000 acres of land off the coast of the NPR-A and more than 350,000 acres off the coast of ANWR. Toward that end, I have directed my Commissioner of Natural Resources, Tom Irwin, to open an immediate dialog with the residents of the North Slope. While the US House and Senate remain grid-locked over opening ANWR for oil development, I am not burdened with that process."

Alaska and the North Slope residents support the opening of ANWR. The governor intends to include the state offshore ANWR tracts in the Beaufort Sea Area lease sale in October.

The governor noted estimates that the 1002 area could produce up to 1.6 MMb/d of oil. While there is no guarantee that amount is recoverable, directional drilling from state leases offshore could help delineate onshore deposits, could identify deposits that collectively might justify investment in onshore pipelines, and could even discover more oil than is ever found onshore.

"America should not be held hostage by Middle-East oil imports. Motorists should not have to pay more than $2 for a gallon of gasoline. Alaska oil, Alaska natural gas, can help balance the equation," Murkowski said.

04/01/04