Legislature(2021 - 2022)BARNES 124

03/08/2021 01:00 PM House RESOURCES

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Audio Topic
01:00:52 PM Start
01:01:55 PM Overview(s): Dept. of Environmental Conservation by Commissioner Jason Brune
02:10:00 PM HJR12
02:42:46 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Overview: Dept. of Environmental Conservation by TELECONFERENCED
Commissioner Jason Brune
*+ HJR 12 ENDORSING ANWR LEASING; RELATED ISSUES TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
         HJR 12-ENDORSING ANWR LEASING; RELATED ISSUES                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:10:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK announced  that the final order  of business would                                                               
be  HJR 12  HOUSE JOINT  RESOLUTION  NO. 12,  "Urging the  United                                                               
States Department of the Interior,  Bureau of Land Management, to                                                               
honor the recent  lease sales and proceed with  permitting in the                                                               
Arctic  National Wildlife  Refuge;  urging the  President of  the                                                               
United States  to defend  the 2020  Record of  Decision approving                                                               
the  Coastal Plain  Oil and  Gas  Leasing Program  in the  Arctic                                                               
National  Wildlife Refuge;  opposing  designation  of the  Arctic                                                               
National Wildlife Refuge  as a National Monument;  and urging the                                                               
Alaska delegation  in Congress  to uphold sec.  20001 of  the Tax                                                               
Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017."                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:10:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER,  as prime  sponsor of HJR  12, explained                                                               
the  resolution   requests  continuation  of  the   oil  and  gas                                                               
development  program  in  the  Arctic  National  Wildlife  Refuge                                                               
(ANWR) that was  recently put on hold.  When  the Alaska National                                                               
Interest Lands Conservation  Act (ANILCA) was signed  into law in                                                               
1980, he said,  Congress itself reserved the right  to permit oil                                                               
and gas  development and production  on the Coastal  Plain ["1002                                                               
Area"] of  the refuge.   Within days of  the first lease  sale in                                                               
January  2021  President  Biden placed  the  entire  leasing  and                                                               
development program on hold, and HJR  12 urges a reversal of that                                                               
action.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER related that  the resolution implores the                                                               
U.S. Department  of Interior Bureau  of Land Management  (BLM) to                                                               
honor the  recent Coastal Plain  oil and gas leasing  program and                                                               
to proceed with  permitting in the 1002 Area of  the refuge.  The                                                               
resolution also  asks President Biden's administration  to defend                                                               
the BLM's  2020 Record  of Decision  approving the  Coastal Plain                                                               
oil  and gas  leasing.   The  resolution asks  that  when BLM  is                                                               
considering  and taking  action on  the leasing  program that  it                                                               
take into  account the long  history of safe and  responsible oil                                                               
and gas development  on the North Slope, as well  as the enormous                                                               
benefits that the development in  the refuge could bring to North                                                               
Slope residents, the state of Alaska, and the nation.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER said  HJR 12 also states  that the Alaska                                                               
State Legislature  opposes any effort  to employ  the Antiquities                                                               
Act  to  designate  the  Arctic National  Wildlife  Refuge  as  a                                                               
national  monument.   It  implores  President  Biden to  take  an                                                               
approach of  consultation and engagement in  these decisions that                                                               
affect  the state,  local communities,  Alaska Native  tribes and                                                               
entities, and  residents.  The  resolution urges  President Biden                                                               
to immediately  rescind the provisions  of Executive  Order 13990                                                               
pertaining to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER noted  that  while  the Arctic  National                                                               
Wildlife  Refuge  isn't  in  his   district,  he  worked  on  the                                                               
resolution's  language with  Chair Patkotak  whose district  does                                                               
include the  refuge and  the North  Slope.   He stressed  that he                                                               
believes this is a state's rights  issue as well as a jobs issue.                                                               
Development within the  refuge could create tens  of thousands of                                                               
jobs across the country and thousands of jobs within Alaska.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:15:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK opened invited testimony.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:15:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KARA MORIARTY, President and CEO,  Alaska Oil and Gas Association                                                               
(AOGA), testified  in support  of HJR 12.   She  paraphrased from                                                               
the following written statement [original punctuation provided]:                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     AOGA  is the  professional  trade  association for  the                                                                    
     industry and  we appreciate the opportunity  to testify                                                                    
     today  on  House  Joint  Resolution  12  (HJR12).  This                                                                    
     resolution   provides  specific   recommendations  that                                                                    
     honors the  commitment of  ANILCA and  the will  of the                                                                    
     majority of  Alaskans who support the  safe development                                                                    
     of the  Coastal Plain  of the Arctic  National Wildlife                                                                    
     Refuge (ANWR).                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     The  sponsor  did  a  very  nice  job  summarizing  the                                                                    
     specific  actions that  need to  continue  to occur  to                                                                    
     keeping  ANWR   as  a   viable  option   for  long-term                                                                    
     development of our oil and gas resources.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     The Arctic National Refuge was  expanded from 9 million                                                                    
     acres  to over  19 million  acres with  the passage  of                                                                    
     ANILCA in  1980, with over  90 [percent] of  the region                                                                    
     permanently protected  as wilderness.  However, section                                                                    
     1002  of  ANILCA  specifically   states  that  a  small                                                                    
     portion of  the Coastal  Plain would  be set  aside for                                                                    
     future oil  and gas  development. There was  always the                                                                    
     intent that  oil and  gas could occur  one day.  It was                                                                    
     part of one of the many compromises of ANILCA.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     The Tax  Act of 2017,  referenced in HJR12,  does limit                                                                    
     development to  2,000 acres.  To give  you perspective,                                                                    
     the  Dulles  International  Airport  in  DC  is  12,000                                                                    
     acres,  and  right  here in  Alaska,  the  Ted  Stevens                                                                    
     International Airport is just over 4,600 acres.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     So,  why   are  even   discussing  more  oil   and  gas                                                                    
     development down the road?  The U.S. Energy Information                                                                    
     Administration (EIA) predicts  that, by 2050, petroleum                                                                    
     and  other  liquids will  continue  to  supply over  50                                                                    
     [percent]  of  the  energy  and  fuels  in  the  United                                                                    
     States,  and  the International  Energy  Administration                                                                    
     (IEA) has a similar prediction for global demand.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     So, if the demand for oil  and gas is going to be there                                                                    
     at least 30 years from  now, why the Coastal Plain? The                                                                    
     federal  government has  described the  potential 10-11                                                                    
     billion barrels of  oil recovery from the  1002 Area as                                                                    
     the  most  significant  oil  potential  in  the  United                                                                    
     States.  And  while  market conditions  and  regulatory                                                                    
     risk  that currently  exist were  the likely  causes of                                                                    
     the  lack of  interest  from our  members  in the  2021                                                                    
     January lease  sale, the fact remains  that the Coastal                                                                    
     Plain  is still  the  largest onshore  play on  federal                                                                    
     land  in the  entire  country. And  it  is a  long-term                                                                    
     play.  Just  because   companies  did  not  demonstrate                                                                    
     interest two  months ago,  does not mean  it is  not an                                                                    
     important  component  of  energy supply  for  years  to                                                                    
     come.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     In  fact, in  2018  the EIA  estimated that  production                                                                    
     from the Coastal Plain, if  it were to occur from 2031-                                                                    
     2050, could  reduce U.S. expenditures on  crude oil and                                                                    
     petroleum products imports by almost $600 billion.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     One  of the  last things  I would  like to  stress, and                                                                    
     would like  to stress  the most,  is that  Alaska's oil                                                                    
     and gas industry has a  history of safe, effective, and                                                                    
     environmentally responsible  development of  the Arctic                                                                    
     spanning over five decades.  Development today does not                                                                    
     occur the  same way  as it  did 40 years  ago.   In the                                                                    
     1970's, a typical  oil pad would be about  65 acres and                                                                    
     the  drilling  areas  underground  would  extend  about                                                                    
     three  miles. Today,  the surface  area  has shrunk  to                                                                    
     about  12-14   acres,  but  with  the   advancement  of                                                                    
     technologies and cutting-edge  drilling techniques that                                                                    
     are  often  pioneered  in   Alaska,  the  drilling  now                                                                    
     extends to  up to 55  miles underground. But,  with the                                                                    
     advancement  of  a  brand-new  drilling  rig  owned  by                                                                    
     Alaska Native  Corporation Doyon, commonly  referred to                                                                    
     as  "The Beast",  Alaska  is now  home  to the  largest                                                                    
     extended  reach drilling  rig  in  North America.  Now,                                                                    
     drilling can expand  another 100 miles, for  a total of                                                                    
     154  square miles  underground while  still maintaining                                                                    
     only about a 14-acre gravel pad on the surface.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Eventual  development  of  the Coastal  Plain  will  be                                                                    
     safe, be  good for  the country,  and will  continue to                                                                    
     build  upon  the jobs  and  revenues  the industry  has                                                                    
     contributed  to  the  State  and  the  local  area  for                                                                    
     decades.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:21:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TOM WALSH, Past President (2020), Alaska Support Industry                                                                       
Alliance, testified  in support of  HJR 12.  He  paraphrased from                                                               
the following written statement [original punctuation provided]:                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Thank you  for the opportunity to  provide testimony on                                                                    
     this resolution  today on behalf of  the Alaska Support                                                                    
     Industry Alliance,  an organization  of which I  am the                                                                    
     immediate Past  President. The  Alliance is  an Alaskan                                                                    
     Trade  Organization   whose  mission  is    To  promote                                                                    
     responsible exploration, development  and production of                                                                    
     oil, gas and  mineral resources for the  benefit of all                                                                    
     Alaskans."                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     The Alliance  has a membership  of 500+  businesses and                                                                    
     individuals, who  in total employ over  30,000 workers.                                                                    
     Alliance education  and advocacy  efforts focus  on our                                                                    
     mission  by   providing  substantiated,   credible  and                                                                    
     valuable information  for our members, the  public, and                                                                    
     decision-makers, such  as yourselves.  I am  honored to                                                                    
     inform you  today that the  subject resolution  is very                                                                    
     much aligned with the  Alliance mission and objectives,                                                                    
     and I  appreciate this opportunity  to outline  some of                                                                    
     the significant areas of alignment.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     The    resolution     is    comprehensive     in    its                                                                    
     characterization  of the  many reasons  why exploration                                                                    
     and development  of ANWR are important  to Alaskans and                                                                    
     the  citizens of  the United  States, and  supports the                                                                    
     fact  that   the  activity  has   been  congressionally                                                                    
     authorized, and  is supported  broadly by  Alaskans. In                                                                    
     fact, it  is critical to Alaskans,  given the declining                                                                    
     oil  production and  associated revenue  stream to  the                                                                    
     State. The  text of  the resolution  covers all  of the                                                                    
     key  areas aligned  with the  Alliance mission,  but it                                                                    
     would require more than my  allocated 5 minutes just to                                                                    
     read the  text. Therefore, I  will summarize a  few key                                                                    
     points in my testimony.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Revenue                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     As  we  all know,  the  State  of Alaska  is  extremely                                                                    
     dependent on  revenue gained from taxes  and royalty on                                                                    
     oil production  from our declining asset  base. Natural                                                                    
     decline  of   oil  production  has   been  aggressively                                                                    
     mitigated  by  our  industry partners  through  massive                                                                    
     drilling,   enhanced   recovery,  and   deployment   of                                                                    
     innovative  and   evolving  technology.  The   cost  of                                                                    
     producing a  barrel of  oil in  Alaska has  always been                                                                    
     challenging  in comparison  to  most other  hydrocarbon                                                                    
     provinces, although  our giant field size  has provided                                                                    
     some relief  through economies of  scale. As  our giant                                                                    
     fields   decline,    and   overall    production   rate                                                                    
     diminishes, those  economies of scale no  longer apply.                                                                    
     Simply  put, we  need  more oil  production to  sustain                                                                    
     commercial   viability.   Successful  exploration   and                                                                    
     production from ANWR  can play a key  role in extending                                                                    
     oil throughput to  TAPS [Trans-Alaska Pipeline System],                                                                    
     and in supporting Alaska's economic engine.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Energy Independence                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     The  United States  has remarkably  reached a  point of                                                                    
     energy independence,  largely based on a  resurgence of                                                                    
     oil and  gas production in  the Lower 48  shale basins.                                                                    
     This energy  independence is fragile  and may  prove to                                                                    
     be  fleeting in  light of  economic and  sociopolitical                                                                    
     changes[.]  The  fact  remains that  our  productivity,                                                                    
     economic  health, and  prosperity as  a nation  rely on                                                                    
     affordable  energy.  There  is no  doubt  that  climate                                                                    
     change  impacts will  require a  paradigm shift  in our                                                                    
     energy  production and  consumption,  but  there is  no                                                                    
     light  switch to  turn on  renewable energy.  A logical                                                                    
     and  structured transition  from carbon-based  fuels to                                                                    
     carbon-neutral  will require  a logical  and structured                                                                    
     effort to reduce carbon release  while we transition to                                                                    
     the  next source  of energy.  Alaska can  play a  major                                                                    
     role in this transition, based  on our vast natural gas                                                                    
     resources, and  our carbon  sequestration opportunities                                                                    
     in  depleted subsurface  reservoirs. Oil  production at                                                                    
     ANWR could  help as a  bridge to access to  our natural                                                                    
     gas resources, and  eventually to gas commercialization                                                                    
     of natural gas at ANWR  and across the North Slope. The                                                                    
     U.S.   Geological   Survey  has   estimated   potential                                                                    
     reserves of nearly 8 billion  barrels of oil, and 7 TCF                                                                    
     [trillion cubic feet]  of gas in the  subsurface of the                                                                    
     Coastal Plain of ANWR.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:25:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Jobs                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Alaska  and  the  nation  are  suffering  from  massive                                                                    
     unemployment due  to the pandemic, magnified  in Alaska                                                                    
     by the  collapse in oil  price. We are just  now seeing                                                                    
     some  recovery  in  oil  price, but  we  all  know  how                                                                    
     reliable that  trend has proven  to be. We have  yet to                                                                    
     see  recovery  in energy  sector  jobs  in Alaska,  and                                                                    
     Alliance  member  companies  and  their  employees  are                                                                    
     impacted  particularly severely.  Jobs associated  with                                                                    
     exploration  and  development  of ANWR  resources  will                                                                    
     have significant  positive impact for our  members, and                                                                    
     indeed the benefit to the  State of Alaska and the U.S.                                                                    
     jobs market  will be significant,  as evidenced  by the                                                                    
     activity  associated with  oil  development across  the                                                                    
     North  Slope of  Alaska [historically].  We desperately                                                                    
     need this jobs  engine to help our return  to a healthy                                                                    
     employment environment.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Environmental Stewardship                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Alliance  companies have  helped  the  oil industry  in                                                                    
     Alaska to be leaders  in safe and environmentally sound                                                                    
     exploration and development of oil  and gas on a global                                                                    
     level. We  strongly believe  that Alaskans  can explore                                                                    
     for,  develop,  and  produce  oil and  gas  in  a  more                                                                    
     prudent,  safe  and  environmentally  sensitive  manner                                                                    
     than anyone  in the world.  The Alliance is  working to                                                                    
     brand  this   record  of  safety   and  environmentally                                                                    
     sensitive  development on  behalf  of  our industry  in                                                                    
     Alaska, and the industry  has long recognized Alaska as                                                                    
     a  training  ground  for  their  global  operations  in                                                                    
     minimizing   impact  and   footprint  associated   with                                                                    
     oilfield development.  We can  develop and  produce oil                                                                    
     and gas from ANWR's  Coastal Plain with minimal impact,                                                                    
     and with a  tiny footprint. We have  proved this across                                                                    
     the North Slope of Alaska.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Access to Resources                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     A fundamental premise of the  resolution is that Alaska                                                                    
     and Alaskans have a right  to benefit from our resource                                                                    
     wealth,  but  we  can't benefit  from  what  we  cannot                                                                    
     access.   Alaska  is   a  resource   state,  from   our                                                                    
     significant   mineral   resources   to   our   abundant                                                                    
     fisheries, our spectacular natural  beauty, and our oil                                                                    
     and  gas  opportunities.  We need  to  develop  a  more                                                                    
     diverse  economy,   no  doubt,   but  we   rely  almost                                                                    
     exclusively on  extraction of our natural  resources to                                                                    
     drive our economy, and we  have since before Statehood.                                                                    
     It is rational  for Alaskans to expect  to benefit from                                                                    
     the natural  resources with  which we've  been blessed,                                                                    
     and it  is reasonable  for us to  have access  to those                                                                    
     resources and  associated jobs  and revenue  whether on                                                                    
     state, federal or private  lands. This resolution makes                                                                    
     a clear case  for that access. As  stated earlier, this                                                                    
     resolution  is   aligned  with  Alliance   mission  and                                                                    
     objectives, and I believe  submittal of this resolution                                                                    
     to the  identified parties is not  only appropriate but                                                                    
     required to  help make Alaskan's  voices heard  in this                                                                    
     critical time.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:28:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KATI CAPOZZI, President & CEO, Alaska Chamber of Commerce,                                                                      
testified in support of HJR 12.  She spoke as follows:                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     The Alaska Chamber was founded  in 1953 and our mission                                                                    
     is to  advocate for  a healthy business  environment in                                                                    
     Alaska.   The  chamber has  more than  700 members  and                                                                    
     represents businesses of all  sizes and industries from                                                                    
     across the state.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     The Alaska  Chamber thanks you  for introducing  HJR 12                                                                    
     and enthusiastically supports HJR  12.  Our top federal                                                                    
     priority at the  chamber for years has  been to support                                                                    
     oil  and gas  exploration and  development in  Alaska's                                                                    
     federal areas  and to encourage and  support the Alaska                                                                    
     Legislature  to   strongly  advocate   for  responsible                                                                    
     development of these valuable resources.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Our  reason  for  prioritizing this  issue  is  simple.                                                                    
     Developing  the   1002  Area  of  ANWR   would  provide                                                                    
     incredible  opportunity  for all  Alaskans,  especially                                                                    
     economic  opportunities.   Responsible  development  in                                                                    
     the  1002 Area  would  provide an  invaluable boost  to                                                                    
     America's  energy   security  and  bring   much  needed                                                                    
     economic growth potential  to Alaska at a  time when we                                                                    
     need  it most.   Our  iconic pipeline  also desperately                                                                    
     needs new oil the ANWR development could provide.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     ANWR has  incredible potential for  oil and gas    more                                                                    
     than 10  billion barrels by some  government estimates.                                                                    
     For  reference,  the  Trans-Alaska Pipeline  has  moved                                                                    
     just more than 17 billion  barrels of oil since startup                                                                    
     more than 40  years ago.  So the  resource potential in                                                                    
     ANWR  is truly  incredible.   A  project  the size  and                                                                    
     scope  of ANWR  would create  thousands of  high-paying                                                                    
     jobs  for  Alaskans.    In  addition,  with  the  Point                                                                    
     Thomson development fully operational  just to the west                                                                    
     of ANWR, the 1002 Area  is closer than ever to existing                                                                    
     infrastructure  and could  feed into  TAPS with  a much                                                                    
     smaller footprint than in years past.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     The  Alaska  Chamber  was   pleased  to  see  potential                                                                    
     development of ANWR making  historic progress in recent                                                                    
     years.     However,  with   a  new   administration  in                                                                    
     Washington,  DC, ANWR's  future  is less  certain.   We                                                                    
     appreciate and applaud  the joint resolution's sponsors                                                                    
     for sending a strong  bi-partisan signal of support for                                                                    
     maintaining  that  momentum  and  hope  our  collective                                                                    
     Alaskan  voices make  a  difference  to federal  policy                                                                    
     makers.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Last  but not  least,  the  Alaska Chamber's  statewide                                                                    
     scientific  polling of  Alaskans  attitudes about  ANWR                                                                    
     continually show the vast  majority of Alaskans support                                                                    
     opening  a  small  portion  of  ANWR  to  oil  and  gas                                                                    
     development.   Two-thirds  of Alaskans  support it  and                                                                    
     they have for decades.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     We thank  you for introducing a  resolution that stands                                                                    
     to  improve the  business  climate and  to create  jobs                                                                    
     here in  Alaska at  a time  when we  need it  more than                                                                    
     ever, and we offer our full support.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:31:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MARLEANNA HALL, Executive  Director, Resource Development Council                                                               
for Alaska (RDC),  testified in support of HJR 12.   She said RDC                                                               
is a statewide business association  comprised of individuals and                                                               
companies from  Alaska's oil and gas,  fishing, forestry, mining,                                                               
and tourism industries.  She continued as follows:                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Our  membership  includes   all  12  landowning  Alaska                                                                    
     Native   corporations,  local   communities,  organized                                                                    
     labor,  industry   support  firms,  and   thousands  of                                                                    
     Alaskans   supporting    responsible   development   of                                                                    
     Alaska's natural resources.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     I am  here today to  express strong support for  HJR 12                                                                    
     as it supports the oil  and gas lease program that will                                                                    
     allow  limited   activity  within   the  non-wilderness                                                                    
     portion of the Coastal Plain of ANWR.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     ...  This   legislation  well  describes   measures  to                                                                    
     properly  address ANILCA  and  the  intent to  preserve                                                                    
     areas   in  the   Coastal  Plain   for   oil  and   gas                                                                    
     development.   Further, it is  important that  we allow                                                                    
     for   the   eventual   development,   production,   and                                                                    
     transportation of oil  and gas in and  from the Coastal                                                                    
     Plain that  would meet the requirements  established by                                                                    
     Congress.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Alaska depends  on the  responsible development  of its                                                                    
     natural resources  to expand  and support  our economy.                                                                    
     Alaskans  statewide have  long  supported  oil and  gas                                                                    
     exploration and development in the  Coastal Plain.  ...                                                                    
     Polling has  consistently shown 70 percent  of Alaskans                                                                    
     in support  of development of energy  resources beneath                                                                    
     the 1002  Area.  In  addition, local residents  and the                                                                    
     Inupiat people  who actually live adjacent  to the 1002                                                                    
     Area have also demonstrated support for development.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     However, we recognize there  are special interests that                                                                    
     are  opposed to  any further  development of  America's                                                                    
     energy  resources.   They advocate  for leaving  oil in                                                                    
     the  ground, but  even  in the  era  of climate  change                                                                    
     reality  requires  continued development  of  America's                                                                    
     oil  and  gas  resources.    While  ...  renewable  and                                                                    
     alternative energy will make up  a growing part of U.S.                                                                    
     energy portfolio, it will  not significantly reduce our                                                                    
     reliance on  oil in  the near  or mid  term.   We don't                                                                    
     deny renewable  energy as a  growing part  of America's                                                                    
     portfolio, but  it is still  only projected  to account                                                                    
     for a minority of American energy production in 2040.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     ...  New oil  and gas  production will  be required  to                                                                    
     power America's energy and can  serve as a bridge until                                                                    
     renewable energy becomes a  more dominant energy source                                                                    
     decades  into the  future.   Every  barrel  of oil  not                                                                    
     developed in Alaska or America  will simply be imported                                                                    
     from  overseas  where   environmental  regulations  are                                                                    
     often  weaker.    To further  reduce  our  reliance  on                                                                    
     foreign  sources  of  oil,  America  must  continue  to                                                                    
     pursue responsible oil and  gas development onshore and                                                                    
     offshore  Alaska.    New  production  would  provide  a                                                                    
     bridge to the alternative  and renewable energy sources                                                                    
     of the future.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Oil  development on  a fraction  of  the Coastal  Plain                                                                    
     would  create  thousands  of  jobs  nationwide  and  in                                                                    
     Alaska,  generate  billions  of dollars  in  government                                                                    
     revenues  for  all  public services,  ...  and  further                                                                    
     improve energy  security for  decades into  the future.                                                                    
     Not only  does Alaska need  oil and gas  development on                                                                    
     the Coastal  Plain, but the  rest of the  United States                                                                    
     would  benefit  from  it too.    Let's  fuel  America's                                                                    
     future with ANWR.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:35:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MATTHEW  REXFORD,   President,  Kaktovik   Inupiat  Corporation;,                                                               
Tribal Administrator,,  Native Village of Kaktovik,  testified in                                                               
support of  HJR 12.   He paraphrased  from the  following written                                                               
statement [original punctuation provided]:                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     My  name  is  Matthew   Rexford  and  I  represent  the                                                                    
     community of  Kaktovik, the  only community  inside the                                                                    
     Arctic National  Wildlife Refuge,  known as  ANWR (also                                                                    
     known  and  referred  to  as   the  Refuge),  but  more                                                                    
     importantly Kaktovik  is the only community  inside the                                                                    
     Coastal Plain area  of ANWR   the area  covered by your                                                                    
     Resolution. In  many ways, I  find it  frustrating that                                                                    
     ANWR is still an issue  of public debate   my community                                                                    
     has supported oil and gas  leasing in the Coastal Plain                                                                    
     for many decades and it was  not until the Tax Cuts and                                                                    
     Jobs  Act of  2017 that  we  were able  to realize  our                                                                    
     vision. I  have to admit  that I am  extreme frustrated                                                                    
     that   it   took   seventeen  paragraphs   before   the                                                                    
     Kaktovikmiut are even mentioned in  HJR No. 12 and that                                                                    
     caribou  are  mentioned  before  the  people.  You  are                                                                    
     speaking of my homeland,  our children have been raised                                                                    
     in this  region and our  ancestors are buried  here. It                                                                    
     seems that the Kaktovikmiut,  my people, continue to be                                                                    
     overlooked between  the arguments over oil  and gas and                                                                    
     Caribou  which in  many  national  discussions we  have                                                                    
     been  erased-  yet  ANWR would  not  have  been  opened                                                                    
     without our efforts.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Despite  my frustration,  I am  speaking today  to urge                                                                    
     you to  support HJR No. 12  and to state that  by doing                                                                    
     so you  will support  the Kaktovikmiut in  the farthest                                                                    
     northeast corner  of the State. We  oppose any attempts                                                                    
     to designate ANWR  as a National Monument.  I will keep                                                                    
     my  comments brief  because our  list of  grievances is                                                                    
     long.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Our  community  has  continually  been  caught  between                                                                    
     federal actions  that impactour ability to  realize our                                                                    
     visions  of  a  vibrant  and  sustainable  future.  The                                                                    
     Alaska  Native Claims  Settlement Act  of 1974  (ANCSA)                                                                    
     was supposed to allow  our Kaktovik I?upiat Corporation                                                                    
     (KIC)  the economic  freedoms to  develop its  lands to                                                                    
     benefit our  community. However, ANCSA was  followed by                                                                    
     the  passage  of  the Alaska  National  Interest  Lands                                                                    
     Conservation Act  of [1980] (ANILCA)  which compromised                                                                    
     KIC's  ability   to  access  and  develop   its  lands.                                                                    
     Kaktovik did not want to be  an island in the middle of                                                                    
     a Refuge  but it happened  anyway. Having lived  in the                                                                    
     Refuge since  ANILCA I  am here to  tell you  that life                                                                    
     has been  difficult, and the federal  management agency                                                                    
     has  not  performed  its  duty   to  our  community  as                                                                    
     required. We  would not expect  that to change  if ANWR                                                                    
     was designated a national monument.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     By example, in February 2020,  our school burned to the                                                                    
     ground. We  immediately applied for an  overland permit                                                                    
     to  move temporary  school modules  across the  coastal                                                                    
     plain    as an in-holder  of the Refuge we  have rights                                                                    
     under ANILCA  that were not  provided to us. As  a last                                                                    
     minute  stop-gap measure  we  were forced  to move  the                                                                    
     modules over  the sea-ice to our  community which added                                                                    
     significant   risk   to    the   transport   operation.                                                                    
     Representative Patkotak,  you understand  the challenge                                                                    
     that we faced as a  community to achieve moving modules                                                                    
     before we  lost the  sea ice  route. This  represents a                                                                    
     failure  by  the  Refuge   land  management  agency  to                                                                    
     acknowledge our rights.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     We  support oil  and gas  development not  only on  our                                                                    
     lands but on the adjacent  federal lands to provide for                                                                    
     economic opportunities  to our people through  jobs and                                                                    
     new business  development. Our tribe,  corporation, and                                                                    
     city government  all actively participated not  only in                                                                    
     the   public  process,   but  also   in  government-to-                                                                    
     government  consultation, of  the Environmental  Impact                                                                    
     Statement   (EIS)   performed   the  Bureau   of   Land                                                                    
     Management   (BLM)  development   and  supported   full                                                                    
     leasing   of  the   entire  Coastal   Plain  with   the                                                                    
     mitigations and stipulation presented  in the Record of                                                                    
     Decision.  Potential development  of the  coastal plain                                                                    
     is  not only  important  for Kaktovik'  s economy,  but                                                                    
     also    critical    for    the    long-term    economic                                                                    
     sustainability of  our municipal government,  the North                                                                    
     Slope  Borough  (NSB).  Without the  services  the  NSB                                                                    
     provides  Kaktovik,  and  the other  seven  communities                                                                    
     within the North Slope of  Alaska would still be living                                                                    
     in third-world  conditions. The life expectancy  of the                                                                    
     I?upiat  has increased  13-years  since development  of                                                                    
     oil within our region due  to the borough providing for                                                                    
     clean water  and sanitation in our  communities. We can                                                                    
     not turn  the clock back    we  are part of  the United                                                                    
     States and  demand first world  amenities and  until we                                                                    
     find  something  else to  provide  for  our health  and                                                                    
     economic  well-being  we  are  fundamentally  a  people                                                                    
     dependent on  resource development.  We have  been able                                                                    
     to come  to terms with  that paradox while at  the same                                                                    
     time   providing   appropriate   protections   to   our                                                                    
     subsistence  resources and  the lands  and waters  they                                                                    
     are dependent on.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     We  recognize that  exploration is  the first  phase of                                                                    
     opportunity for our community  I  am sure that you have                                                                    
     seen in  the press last week  surrounding our inability                                                                    
     to  receive permits  to  perform  a low-impact  seismic                                                                    
     program over  our lands. Seismic  is an  important step                                                                    
     to  determine  whether  there are  potential  drillable                                                                    
     targets for oil and gas.  Due to our location, this was                                                                    
     an  important project  to  identify  local natural  gas                                                                    
     targets that  could be developed as  a long-term energy                                                                    
     resource and move our community  away from its reliance                                                                    
     of diesel  and our  only energy source.  However, again                                                                    
     we were thwarted by the  federal government to progress                                                                    
     toward a sustainable future.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Again, I  request that you  support HJR No. 12.  I will                                                                    
     also leave  you with  this request and  that is  to not                                                                    
     forget  about the  people, my  people,  in the  future.                                                                    
     Thank you for your time and invitation.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:41:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PATKOTAK held over HJR 12 and stated that public testimony                                                                
would be taken at the resolution's next hearing.                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HJR 12 Supporting Document ADN Editorial 3.1.2021.pdf HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/10/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12
HJR 12 Testimony Matthew Rexford Kaktovik Inupiat Corporation 2.28.2021.pdf HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/10/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12
HJR 12 Letter of Support AIDEA 3.2.2021.pdf HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12
HJR 12 Sponsor Statement 2.22.2021.pdf HRES 3/1/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/10/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12
HJR 12 Research AOGA Statement on Federal Leasing Ban 01.27.2021.pdf HRES 3/1/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/10/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12
Dept. of Environmental Conservation Presentation for HRES.pdf HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
DEC Overview
HJR 12 FN NA.pdf HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/10/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12
HJR 12 Testimony AOGA 3.8.2021.pdf HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/10/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12
HJR 12 Testimony Tom Walsh AK Support Industry Alliance 3.8.2021.pdf HRES 3/8/2021 1:00:00 PM
HRES 3/10/2021 1:00:00 PM
HJR 12