
Today the U.S. Department of the Interior released its Final Integrated Activity Plan/Environmental Impact Statement, now subject to a 30-day review period, for the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A). This first-ever, area-wide plan would provide for a balance of expanded energy development as well as conservation of key areas. 勛圖窪蹋 President and CEO David Yarnold issued the following statement:
By protecting 11 million acres of Arctic wetlands and wildlife nurseries, this plan proves that sound energy policy and conservation can go hand in hand. And not only that, they must, said 勛圖窪蹋 President and CEO . We strongly endorse the plan as a victory for birds, wildlife, and Americas future. It says that some places really are too precious to drill, and theres no better example than the Teshekpuk Lake area, one of the planet's most prolific bird factories.
Background
The NPR-A is the nations largest tract of public land at approximately 23 million acres (roughly the size of Indiana) and accounts for a significant portion of the entire North Slope of Alaska. The area holds fertile breeding grounds for birds from all seven continents, including vast numbers of waterfowl and shorebirds. The NPR-A also contains calving areas for two of Alaskas largest caribou herds and vital habitat for healthy populations of bears, wolves, and wolverines. (勛圖窪蹋 magazine: . 勛圖窪蹋 Alaska: .)
This management plan for the NPR-A calls for leasing and development of the vast majority of the NPR-As oil resources (72 percent), specifically allowing for development of pipelines and infrastructure that may be needed to support offshore oil and gas development, while also protecting sensitive areas that Congress itself has directed should have maximum protection under the law.
Congress has long recognized the areas extraordinary ecological resources. In 1976, President Gerald Ford signed into law legislation that transferred management of the NPR-A from the U.S. Navy to the Department of the Interior with a unique dual mandate to provide for both future energy production as well as protection of special areas within the NPR-A.
Congress charged the secretary of the interior with managing the NPR-A to provide for maximum protection of areas with significant subsistence, recreational, fish and wildlife, or historical or scenic value (42 USC 禮 6504). Congress has directed that the secretary shall include or provide for such conditions, restrictions, and prohibitions as the secretary deems necessary or appropriate to mitigate reasonably foreseeable and significantly adverse effects on the surface resources of the NPR-A (42 USC 禮 6506a).
As recognized in the very first land management plan prepared for the NPRA in 1998, the fundamental purpose is to determine the appropriate multiple use management of the area; federal law encourages oil and gas development in NPR-A while requiring protection of important surface values.
All NPR-A Final IAP/EIS documents can be accessed from the BLM-Alaska website at . A map of the NPR-A final plan delineation and additional information is available at .
Secretary Salazars memo to the Bureau of Land Management is available .