Legislature(2015 - 2016)BARNES 124

02/04/2015 01:00 PM House RESOURCES

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01:04:04 PM Start
01:05:18 PM Overview(s): Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mining, Land and Water
02:03:11 PM Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys
03:04:25 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Overview: TELECONFERENCED
Dept. of Natural Resources
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
               HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                        February 4, 2015                                                                                        
                           1:04 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Benjamin Nageak, Co-Chair                                                                                        
Representative David Talerico, Co-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Mike Hawker, Vice Chair                                                                                          
Representative Bob Herron                                                                                                       
Representative Kurt Olson                                                                                                       
Representative Paul Seaton                                                                                                      
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Geran Tarr                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Craig Johnson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
OVERVIEW(S):                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF MINING, LAND AND                                                                   
WATER                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF GEOLOGICAL &                                                                       
GEOPHYSICAL SURVEYS                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
BRENT GOODRUM, Director                                                                                                         
Division of Mining, Land and Water (DMLW)                                                                                       
Department of Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                           
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided a PowerPoint overview of the                                                                    
Division of Mining, Land and Water.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
EDMUND FOGELS, Deputy Commissioner                                                                                              
Office of the Commissioner                                                                                                      
Department of Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                           
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   Answered questions  during the  PowerPoint                                                             
overview of the Division of Mining, Land and Water.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
STEVEN MASTERMAN CPG, State Geologist, Director                                                                                 
Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys (DGGS)                                                                             
Department of Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                           
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    Provided  a PowerPoint  overview  of  the                                                             
Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MARK MYERS, Commissioner                                                                                                        
Department of Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                           
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   Answered questions  during the  PowerPoint                                                             
overview of the Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
EDMUND FOGELS, Deputy Commissioner                                                                                              
Office of the Commissioner                                                                                                      
Department of Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                           
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   Answered questions  during the  PowerPoint                                                             
overview of the Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:04:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  DAVID  TALERICO  called the  House  Resources  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting to  order at 1:04 p.m.   Representatives Olson,                                                               
Seaton, Josephson,  Hawker, Nageak, and Talerico  were present at                                                               
the call  to order.   Representatives Herron and Tarr  arrived as                                                               
the meeting was in progress.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
^OVERVIEW(S):    Department  of Natural  Resources,  Division  of                                                               
Mining, Land and Water                                                                                                          
                          OVERVIEW(S):                                                                                      
 Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mining, Land and                                                              
                             Water                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:05:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO announced  that the first order  of business is                                                               
an overview of  the Department of Natural  Resources, Division of                                                               
Mining, Land and Water.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:05:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BRENT  GOODRUM,  Director, Division  of  Mining,  Land and  Water                                                               
(DMLW),  Department   of  Natural  Resources  (DNR),   began  his                                                               
PowerPoint overview  of his division  by noting that he  has been                                                               
the division  director since May 2011.   Prior to that  he served                                                               
20 years  in the  U.S. Marine  Corps and  received a  Bachelor of                                                               
Science degree  from the Naval  Academy and a Master's  degree in                                                               
Operations Research from the Naval Postgraduate School.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  TALERICO offered  his  appreciation  for Mr.  Goodrum's                                                               
military service.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:07:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM said  the division's mission [slide 2]  is to provide                                                               
for the  appropriate use and  management of  Alaska's state-owned                                                               
land and  water, aiming  toward maximum  use consistent  with the                                                               
public  interest.    He  said   DNR  is  principally  about  land                                                               
management  and  land  stewardship,   and  managing  the  state's                                                               
resources  is  not  just  for  this  generation  but  all  future                                                               
generations.  A transparent process  and public participation are                                                               
needed and  the statutes  and regulations  reflect that.   Moving                                                               
forward  the division  will continue  to emphasize  the need  and                                                               
requirement  for  good  science  and   good  data  to  make  good                                                               
decisions because,  ultimately, those are the  decisions that are                                                               
upheld over time.  He  noted that [DNR] manages approximately 100                                                               
million  acres of  uplands and  about 60  million acres  of shore                                                               
lands, tidelands, and  submerged lands.  Alaska  has 40,000 miles                                                               
of coastline, more  than the rest of the U.S.  combined, and more                                                               
than 3  million lakes.  The  skill sets and expertise  within the                                                               
division  are diverse,  which is  important  for solving  complex                                                               
land management issues.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:09:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM  highlighted the division's core  services [slide 3].                                                               
Addressing the core service of  acquiring land, he said the state                                                               
has to  date received  about 100  million acres  of the  over 105                                                               
million acres  to which it is  entitled.  The division  must make                                                               
good  decisions with  the remaining  lands it  brings into  state                                                               
ownership, he noted.   Sometimes land is gifted to  the state and                                                               
sometimes land  conservation easements come in  through the Exxon                                                               
Valdez  oil spill  (EVOS).   The  Realty  Services Section  holds                                                               
title  to all  of  that  land for  the  state  and manages  those                                                               
easements as well.  It is  important that the division defend and                                                               
assert state  ownership issues.   When the state owns  land, both                                                               
surface  and subsurface  rights are  associated with  those lands                                                               
and  it  is  the  division's  responsibility to  do  a  good  job                                                               
managing those.  Through its  Public Access Assertion and Defense                                                               
Unit the division  defends access to state land and  waters.  The                                                               
division closely tracks historic trails,  known as R.S. 2477s, as                                                               
they are legal  access throughout the state.  Under  17(b) of the                                                               
Alaska Native Claims Settlement  Act, easements go across private                                                               
lands to  ensure access  to other  state lands;  it is  a federal                                                               
government  responsibility  and  the division  ensures  that  the                                                               
federal government  appropriately annotates those.   The division                                                               
also  closely follows  public trust  doctrine  and equal  footing                                                               
issues.  Under  AS 38.04.065, the division creates  area plans to                                                               
direct management  of state  lands.  These  are high  level plans                                                               
that encompass generally millions of acres  at a time.  The plans                                                               
look at management intent, the  resources available in that area,                                                               
and  make 20-year  forecasts for  what the  state foresees  could                                                               
take  place in  an  area.   The  principles  of multiple-use  and                                                               
sustained yield are used and observed in that planning process.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:12:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM continued highlighting  the division's core services,                                                               
pointing  out that  the division  sells and  transfers land  into                                                               
private  ownership and  completes  municipal  entitlement.   When                                                               
formed, municipalities are  entitled to a certain  amount of land                                                               
based upon  a calculation.   Through  an iterative  process those                                                               
entities request  certain lands  and then the  division evaluates                                                               
those and transfers  those lands to the  municipalities for their                                                               
ownership and  economic benefit.  The  division issues short-term                                                               
and long-term authorizations for the use  of state land.  This is                                                               
critical and is  the bread and butter of what  the division does.                                                               
The  division  provides  regulatory  oversight for  a  number  of                                                               
different  functions, including  water use  throughout the  state                                                               
and  dam safety.    However, when  there is  some  type of  power                                                               
generation involved with a dam,  the federal government generally                                                               
has   jurisdiction   through   the  Federal   Energy   Regulatory                                                               
Commission (FERC).   The division also does the  platting for the                                                               
unorganized boroughs  throughout the  state, and it  oversees the                                                               
state's  program  for coal  exploration  and  development and  is                                                               
responsible  for mine  reclamation.   Additionally, the  division                                                               
collects revenues  for the use and  disposal of state land.   The                                                               
Lands Sales  and Contract  Administration Section  collects about                                                               
$5 million  annually from  sales, which then  goes back  into the                                                               
land disposal income fund which  pays for that ability.  Alaska's                                                               
constitution  provides  that land  shall  be  made available  for                                                               
settlement and development.  The  Mining Section oversees the 3.7                                                               
million acres  of mining claims  within the state.   About 21,000                                                               
acres are in  lease and there are about 26,000  acres of offshore                                                               
lease.   The  majority  of offshore  lease,  about 23,500  acres,                                                               
occurred in  2011 near  Nome.  About  42,000 state  mining claims                                                               
exist within the  state.  Through various royalties  and taxes in                                                               
2013  the  state  received  over  $94  million  from  the  mining                                                               
industry.   Lastly, the division  provides active  stewardship of                                                               
state   land  and   water,  which   is  the   division's  biggest                                                               
responsibility and something  that it takes very  seriously.  Mr.                                                               
Goodrum  noted that  the division's  mission  results, listed  on                                                               
slide 4,  flow from its  core services.  He  said he will  not be                                                               
discussing these results  today because they can be  found on the                                                               
Office of Management & Budget (OMG) web page.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:16:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM  outlined the  anatomy of  a large  scale development                                                               
project.   Drawing attention to slide  5, he said the  picture is                                                               
of Golden  Valley Electric Association's  Eva Creek  Wind Project                                                               
north  of Healy.   The  division's northern  region in  Fairbanks                                                               
oversaw the  permitting of  this project  and is  continuing with                                                               
the  follow-up.   He described  the five  types of  authorization                                                               
that  all large  projects require:   leases,  easements, permits,                                                               
material sales,  and water authorizations.   Generally, all large                                                               
projects require a long-term lease  in order to get the financial                                                               
backing for the project.  Many  times easements are needed to get                                                               
access to those  lands.  Permits are often  needed for short-term                                                               
authorizations  to  make  things   happen  in  a  timely  manner.                                                               
Material  sales, such  as sand  and gravel,  are critical  to any                                                               
project.   Also, some sort  of water authorization  is necessary,                                                               
such as a temporary water use for  a short time period or a water                                                               
right for the continued use of water for the project.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM turned to slides  6-7, pointing out that between 2006                                                               
and  2011  the number  of  [requests]  for  these five  types  of                                                               
authorizations  was  ever  increasing.   The  administration  and                                                               
administration recognized  that this issue needed  to be resolved                                                               
and took action.  This  ever-increasing permit backlog introduced                                                               
uncertainty and  had a chilling  effect on investment  within the                                                               
state, so a  number of things were done.   In 2011 the department                                                               
put  together  a comprehensive  multi-facetted  plan  for how  to                                                               
address the  permit backlog and  make Alaska a  better investment                                                               
location  with certainty,  timeliness, and  effectiveness in  its                                                               
permitting process.  The focus  was primarily on people, process,                                                               
and statutory and  regulatory packages.  When he  came onboard at                                                               
the end  of fiscal year (FY)  2011, the division was  required to                                                               
keep 26  positions vacant  due to  lack of  funding.   The effort                                                               
added some staff and increased some  of the general fund that was                                                               
necessary to start moving this  permit situation in a more proper                                                               
direction.  The  process was looked at for how  to make it better                                                               
and a  number of statutory  and regulatory efforts  are underway.                                                               
Changes affecting  leasing and material sales  have significantly                                                               
made these processes go more  smoothly and timely for applicants.                                                               
Displaying slide 8, Mr. Goodrum  noted that on December 31, 2014,                                                               
the backlog  stood at 1,035  authorizations.  Since the  start of                                                               
FY 2012  the backlog has  been reduced  by 1,623, a  reduction of                                                               
61.1 percent.   The division continues to make  strong process to                                                               
reach where it  wants to be.   He stressed it is  important to be                                                               
able to attract the right people,  train them, and retain them so                                                               
that  the division  has  people  with the  right  skill sets  for                                                               
making those  challenging decisions and,  he added, the  chart on                                                               
slide 8 is indicative of their great work.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:21:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM moved  to slide 9, stating that process  is the other                                                               
thing  besides people,  and  the primary  tool  in improving  the                                                               
division's process is  the Unified Permit Program.   This program                                                               
is an  umbrella of various  different capabilities  that increase                                                               
or create  permit efficiencies.   The  division began  with IBM's                                                               
business process  management system, which moved  the division to                                                               
an electronic case-file  system.  Prior to this  system, only the                                                               
person holding the physical hard  copy of a particular case could                                                               
adjudicate  it, or  see where  something  was at,  or update  the                                                               
information.   The division  is also  using a  Continuous Process                                                               
Improvement Model  to look  at how to  make things  effective and                                                               
more efficient.  This is really  helping shape the culture of the                                                               
division for  how to be  more innovative  and to better  meet the                                                               
needs  of  constituents  and applicants.    Through  the  Content                                                               
Management  System the  division has  been able  to scan  various                                                               
documents and have things more  available electronically, as well                                                               
as more available  to the public.   Geographic information system                                                               
(GIS) improvements  and information technology  (IT) improvements                                                               
have also been  critical in improving this system  and moving the                                                               
division forward.   Thus far the division has built  out the land                                                               
use permit system and phase I of  water rights.  The intent is to                                                               
aggressively  finish  aspects  of  the  division's  water  rights                                                               
program and then move into easements and material sales.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:23:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM said the primary  goals of the Unified Permit Program                                                               
[slide 10] are to shorten and  make more consistent the times and                                                               
process for  authorizations.  The  division is  building internal                                                               
systems that support and improve  its productivity.  The division                                                               
is looking at how to  have better transparency internally as well                                                               
as externally  for applicants and the  public.  The goal  is that                                                               
ultimately  an  applicant  will  have  the  ability  to  see  and                                                               
understand where an application is  at and what the final hurdles                                                               
are for  getting a decision.   Turning to  slide 11, he  spoke to                                                               
the guiding principles of the  Unified Permit Program, saying the                                                               
first principle  is to meet  statutory and  regulatory frameworks                                                               
or requirements.  The system needs  to be agile and able to adopt                                                               
changes made in  statute or regulation, and  the product selected                                                               
by the division  allows that to be done.   It takes a significant                                                               
amount  of  work  to  put  this together,  but  the  division  is                                                               
confident there  will be even  greater returns as this  effort is                                                               
advanced  forward.   He  said  a  number of  supporting  sections                                                               
within the division  work closely together on the  things that go                                                               
into decisions.   Whether it  is easements, leases,  disposals of                                                               
land, or something else, all those  parts must work together.  He                                                               
expressed  his confidence  in where  things are  headed and  said                                                               
progress is being made in the right direction.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:26:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO inquired whether  17(b) easements directly deal                                                               
only with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM  confirmed it is  exclusively a  BLM-managed program.                                                               
The  BLM is  the agency  that initially  indicates where  a 17(b)                                                               
access would cross  private lands to ensure access  for the state                                                               
to other lands or to navigable waters.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:26:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM  turned to slide  12 and provided a  disclaimer prior                                                               
to  his update  on where  the state  is at  regarding the  Arctic                                                               
National Wildlife  Refuge (ANWR)  boundary dispute.   The onshore                                                               
boundary dispute  involves land  selections in  an administrative                                                               
process, he explained.  There  are some legal questions about the                                                               
Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation  Act (ANILCA) and the                                                               
Statehood Compact.  The issue  is being handled by the Department                                                               
of Law, Natural Resources Section.   The Division of Mining, Land                                                               
and  Water   manages  the  onshore  selections   process  and  is                                                               
advancing that.   By advancing,  he means that in  October [2014]                                                               
the division sent a letter  to BLM asking for priority conveyance                                                               
of the  approximately 20,000 acres  that lie between  the Staines                                                               
and Canning rivers.   The BLM has requested some  files that have                                                               
been archived  somewhere that would  give more information.   The                                                               
offshore piece involves some different  legal claims and is being                                                               
handled by the  Department of Law and the Division  of Oil & Gas.                                                               
The  Division of  Oil &  Gas  manages those  offshore leases  and                                                               
offshore  leases  were issued  this  year  that abut  the  Arctic                                                               
National Wildlife Refuge boundary.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:29:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM  explained that  in 2011  the Division  of Oil  & Gas                                                               
held  an  offshore lease  in  the  area  adjacent to  the  Arctic                                                               
National Wildlife  Refuge and  there was  a successful  bidder on                                                               
some of those  leases.  The Division of Mining,  Land and Water's                                                               
Survey  Section works  closely with  other  divisions within  the                                                               
department.   The Survey Section  was asked to work  closely with                                                               
the  Division of  Oil  &  Gas in  defining  where  is this  legal                                                               
boundary in which  this lease is going to be  issued.  The Survey                                                               
Section  chief brought  this particular  topic to  his attention.                                                               
Mr. Gerald Jennings  was in the Survey Section in  2003 when this                                                               
similar issue appeared  between the state, the  Fish and Wildlife                                                               
Service, and BLM.  Correspondence  indicates that the uncertainty                                                               
about this boundary issue was  quite well known between the state                                                               
and these other federal agencies.   The Fish and Wildlife Service                                                               
recommended  a joint  inspection  of  the area  in  2003 and  Mr.                                                               
Jennings  participated   in  that.    There   were  two  separate                                                               
inspections.  The  first inspection was led by  the Department of                                                               
Interior (DOI) who  had a BLM riparian specialist as  well as the                                                               
chief  of survey  from the  Fish  and Wildlife  Service, and  the                                                               
State of Alaska's  Survey Section chief.   Immediately after that                                                               
the state  led a three-day  inspection of  the area in  which Mr.                                                               
Jennings  participated, along  with an  expert contracted  by the                                                               
state, and the Fish and Wildlife Service's chief of survey.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:31:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GOODRUM said  the state  generated  a report,  known as  the                                                               
Simpson Report, on its findings  within the boundary issue, which                                                               
was  provided to  both BLM  and  the Fish  and Wildlife  Service.                                                               
Neither federal  agency generated any  report back to  the state.                                                               
The  state corresponded  with those  federal agencies  asking for                                                               
copies of  their report, but  nothing was ever generated  and the                                                               
issue essentially  went cold.  After  the lease sale in  2011 the                                                               
division looked  more closely at  this issue with  the Department                                                               
of Law  and the Division of  Oil & Gas.   In July 2014  the state                                                               
went back out  to reconfirm its findings of 2003  and what it had                                                               
independently submitted.  Through the  Department of Law a couple                                                               
of experts were contracted, including  Mr. Jennings.  Mr. Goodrum                                                               
said  he  also personally  participated.    That effort  led  the                                                               
division  to firmly  believe that  the state's  findings in  2003                                                               
were correct.   The division has  had exchanges with both  of the                                                               
federal agencies and is looking for resolution.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:32:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM said  slide 13 depicts the  original 1957 application                                                               
for the  proposed Arctic Wildlife  Range.  This is  important, he                                                               
explained, because  the [No.]  84 original  decision by  the U.S.                                                               
Supreme Court in  United States v. Alaska ruled  that public land                                                             
order  (PLO)  2214, the  application  for  the range,  controlled                                                               
where the boundary  was and this is the map  that accompanied the                                                               
PLO 2214  application.  The  Fish and Wildlife Service  created a                                                               
new map in  1980, slide 14, which maybe had  a slightly different                                                               
boundary.   He  compared the  two  maps by  drawing attention  to                                                               
slide 15, noting that the  map from the 1957 original application                                                               
is  on the  right and  the 1980  map from  the Fish  and Wildlife                                                               
Service  is on  the  right.   He  pointed out  that  on the  1957                                                               
application map the  line bends to the right just  as the Canning                                                               
River does,  and the  Staines River is  indicated further  to the                                                               
west; on the  Fish and Wildlife Service map the  assertion is the                                                               
Staines River.   He said a map in the  briefing packet [also seen                                                               
on slide  16] delineates  in yellow the  area of  disagreement on                                                               
whether those uplands were ever  intended to actually be included                                                               
within  the Arctic  National  Wildlife Refuge  boundary.   In  an                                                               
article  written after  release  of the  [October 2014]  briefing                                                               
packet, the  Fish and Wildlife  Service indicated it  didn't have                                                               
any comment.  But, he argued, it  did make a comment - saying its                                                               
position is that  the boundary of the refuge  has been consistent                                                               
since the  Arctic Wildlife Range  was formed  in the 1950s.   The                                                               
differences  in the  maps, he  continued,  indicate that  perhaps                                                               
there has been a change.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:35:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM, responding to Co-Chair  Nageak, confirmed the yellow                                                               
area [in slide 16] is the  uplands currently in disagreement.  He                                                               
said the  state has  asked for conveyance  to bring  this federal                                                               
land into  state ownership.   The state  is working with  the BLM                                                               
through  an   administrative  process  in  which   the  state  is                                                               
asserting there is  nothing between its top  filed selection that                                                               
hovers over  that land  in any  sort of  a withdrawal  that would                                                               
prevent it from attaching and  the state then having a legitimate                                                               
claim to bring that land into ownership.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR NAGEAK asked  whether the legislature can  assist in the                                                               
process or whether things must first be done administratively.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GOODRUM  replied  he   doesn't  know  that  administratively                                                               
anything  can currently  be done  by the  legislature that  would                                                               
hasten BLM to  decide to convey land to the  state that the state                                                               
has a  legitimate right  to.   He said  he will  get back  to the                                                               
committee  if  he  finds  otherwise,  but right  now  it  is  the                                                               
administrative process that is before  the state, consistent with                                                               
how the state brings other  lands into ownership.  The importance                                                               
of these  lands is  clearly understood by  the division,  as with                                                               
all of the state's land selections.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:37:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM, responding to Co-Chair  Talerico, confirmed that the                                                               
land being  discussed is approximately  20,000 acres  of uplands,                                                               
and  approximately 3,000  acres  offshore are  affected by  where                                                               
this boundary ultimately is.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM concluded  his presentation by noting  that the state                                                               
has  yet to  receive any  official response  from either  federal                                                               
agency on  this particular issue,  not even a counter  claim that                                                               
says the state is wrong in its  assertion.  There is not a single                                                               
Alaskan in this room, he said,  that doesn't believe the state is                                                               
entitled  to its  full entitlement.   Well-defined,  recognizable                                                               
borders are critical  to having good neighbors.   This particular                                                               
boundary issue  has been around  for a while.   He added  that he                                                               
thinks all parties  realize it isn't fully resolved  and said the                                                               
division intends to work closely  with the other federal agencies                                                               
to bring some closure to this very important issue to the state.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  TALERICO concurred,  saying  it is  more  than a  minor                                                               
inconvenience because  of the  land's location.   He  offered his                                                               
appreciation  for the  effort that  has been  put forward  to get                                                               
this issue resolved.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:39:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON  inquired as  to how  much of  the [100]                                                               
million acres  of state-held land  has yet to be  classified; for                                                               
example, classified  as habitat or  mining.  He  further inquired                                                               
whether  there are  circumstances where  the need  to do  that is                                                               
delayed because the  land is so removed, or there  is no interest                                                               
in development, or no nearby communities.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM  answered he will get  back to the committee  with an                                                               
exact  number, but  said the  majority of  state-owned lands  are                                                               
within  some sort  of classification  or  area plan.   There  are                                                               
remote parts  of Alaska for which  there are not yet  area plans.                                                               
The division  is currently  working on  a North  Slope Management                                                               
Plan, which  is a  bit of  a hybrid  between an  area plan  and a                                                               
step-down  management  plan, and  includes  areas  that have  not                                                               
previously had a plan in place.   The division is well aware that                                                               
it needs to get a plan in place for those areas.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:41:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON brought  attention to slide 3  and the core                                                               
service of creating plans to  direct management of state land and                                                               
water.  He offered his belief  that those plans are separate from                                                               
the  plans  for  legislatively  designated  special  areas  being                                                               
worked on by  the Division of Habitat.  He  asked whether DNR has                                                               
provided or will be providing  input into those plans and whether                                                               
there is much cooperation in the development of those plans.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GOODRUM replied  that the  division works  closely with  the                                                               
Alaska Department of  Fish & Game (ADF&G)  on plans, particularly                                                               
critical  habitat  areas.   He  said  DNR  manages the  land  and                                                               
[ADF&G] manages the  habitat and creatures, and  the division has                                                               
a good working  relationship with ADF&G.  Over the  last year, he                                                               
related, there  was concern about the  process, particularly with                                                               
the  critical habitat  areas, but  he  thinks some  of that  will                                                               
change in this current administration  as far as how that process                                                               
will continue  to evolve.   He  added that  DNR will  continue to                                                               
work closely  with ADF&G on those  plans in probably a  much more                                                               
open and transparent process.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON remarked  that Mr.  Goodrum is  getting to                                                               
the crux  of the  idea and that  he heard what  he was  hoping to                                                               
hear.   He said  he wants  to ensure  that DNR  is going  to have                                                               
input  into those  plans  and that  it will  be  an open  process                                                               
involving the people of the local area.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM  responded that DNR  will absolutely be at  the table                                                               
and  wants to  be  involved in  an open  public  process for  the                                                               
management of state  lands and resources, and is  looking to make                                                               
good decisions for the long term.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:44:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON posed a  scenario in which the division,                                                               
in conjunction  with ADF&G,  finds a thriving  fishery.   But, in                                                               
that same location there is  potential for a great and profitable                                                               
mine  that  would help  communities.    He  asked how  DNR  would                                                               
resolve that  kind of decision.   He further asked  whether there                                                               
is a  statute that dictates that.   He noted that  this issue has                                                               
come up and is an issue that will keep coming up.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM answered  that those are some of  the tough decisions                                                               
as various equities  are balanced.  It also gets  to the nexus of                                                               
inter-departmental coordination,  he said, which gets  a bit over                                                               
his head.   A couple of his bosses, present  in the audience, can                                                               
speak  to  the spirit  and  intent  and  how that  actually  will                                                               
function going forward.   Those processes obviously need  to be a                                                               
public process.   A good  decision cannot be made  without public                                                               
involvement  and  good scientific  data.    The department  works                                                               
closely with ADF&G  and others to have the best  data to make the                                                               
best decisions to go forward  in a public environment that allows                                                               
for participation.   Those  are all  critical elements  with what                                                               
DNR is  tasked to  do and  that is  why it  is important  for the                                                               
department to retain good quality employees within the state.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:46:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  recalled that  one of the  elements within                                                               
the ADF&G transition plans was  to request or implement automatic                                                               
water  reservations for  fisheries.   He inquired  how that  idea                                                               
works into the  planning process; for example,  whether DNR feels                                                               
that  is  already there  because  of  constitutional mandates  or                                                               
whether there is a planning process with ADF&G.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM replied  that the concept of whether  the state could                                                               
look at some  sort of automatic reservation of water  has come up                                                               
a number  of times.  He  offered his belief that,  to date, there                                                               
has  generally been  more obstacles  or more  concerns about  how                                                               
those  decisions  would be  based  because  water rights  are  an                                                               
actual right.  He said he has  not had the opportunity to talk to                                                               
Commissioner Myers  about the issue,  but that it  will obviously                                                               
be part  of a discussion  going forward as  to what are  the pros                                                               
and cons and how to base  that on good science; for example, what                                                               
sort of data  can those decisions be made on.   The nexus between                                                               
ADF&G and  DNR for the management  of those resources and  how to                                                               
come to  good decisions  are worthy discussions  that need  to be                                                               
had.  Given it was  one of the transition team's recommendations,                                                               
he said he anticipates that  this administration will look at its                                                               
feasibility and whether it is a good idea.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:48:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON  appreciated  Mr. Goodrum's  response  and                                                               
said he hopes it is done  with public involvement.  He noted that                                                               
coordination is  also needed on  aquatic invasive  species plans.                                                               
Given  the  current  budget constraints,  he  asked  whether  Mr.                                                               
Goodrum sees that this coordination  and preplanning can still go                                                               
forward in order to protect the state's resources.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. GOODRUM deferred to Deputy Commissioner Ed Fogels.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
EDMUND FOGELS,  Deputy Commissioner, Office of  the Commissioner,                                                               
Department  of  Natural  Resources   (DNR),  responded  that  the                                                               
responsibility for  invasive species  falls under the  purview of                                                               
the Division of Agriculture, which  still has an invasive species                                                               
program.    People  in  that  division  are  developing  invasive                                                               
species strategic  plans for  the state.   Under a  memorandum of                                                               
understanding   (MOU)  developed   with  ADF&G,   marine  aquatic                                                               
invasives will  be coordinated by  ADF&G, and  freshwater aquatic                                                               
invasives will  be coordinated by  DNR.   The main focus  of late                                                               
has been on Elodea  and figuring out how to get  a handle on that                                                               
particular  invasive.   Last  year  the  Division of  Agriculture                                                               
director issued  a quarantine  so pet  shops cannot  sell Elodea.                                                               
Last summer  herbicides were tried  in Kenai Peninsula  lakes and                                                               
it  appears they  worked  quite well.    It is  now  a matter  of                                                               
deciding whether to use those  herbicides in other lakes that are                                                               
infested.   It is going to  be an issue of  resources and funding                                                               
because it costs a lot of money  to treat a lake.  The department                                                               
has a  plan, so  if the  money is there  it can  go in;  but more                                                               
important  is  the  buy-in  from   homeowners  in  a  residential                                                               
development around a lake.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:52:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  understood that  through the MOU  there is                                                               
preplanning,  permit  availabilities,  and streamlining  so  that                                                               
when there  is an incipient  population, DNR, ADF&G, and  DEC are                                                               
not waiting on backlogs for permits.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. FOGELS corrected  his earlier statement, saying  that the MOU                                                               
is between  DNR, ADF&G, and  DEC; DEC is part  of the MOU  so DNR                                                               
can work with  them.  Now that these herbicides  have been tested                                                               
in  lakes on  the Kenai  Peninsula, they  are permitted  there by                                                               
DEC, and  DNR is looking for  ways to ensure that  permitting for                                                               
herbicide  use can  go quickly.   He  said he  thinks it  will be                                                               
driven by the  public and homeowner buy-in to the  idea of having                                                               
that treatment done  to their lake.  He said  DNR wants to ensure                                                               
this can  be done quickly  so that  when an infestation  is found                                                               
DEC can rapidly outreach to  the community and, if the homeowners                                                               
are comfortable,  the permits  can be  issued and  - if  there is                                                               
funding -  treatment can be done  as soon as possible  to prevent                                                               
further spread.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON thanked Mr. Fogels  for DNR's work last year                                                               
on Elodea.   He recalled that there was an  outbreak on the Kenai                                                               
Peninsula  and a  bill was  dropped in.   Within  three days  Mr.                                                               
Fogels came  to the  legislature saying  that he  could do  it by                                                               
regulation.   An executive order  (EO) was issued,  shutting down                                                               
the immediate sources of the outbreak,  which was pet shops.  The                                                               
legislature could not have done it that fast.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
The committee took an at-ease from 1:54 p.m. to 2:03 p.m.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
^Department  of  Natural  Resources,  Division  of  Geological  &                                                               
Geophysical Surveys                                                                                                             
   Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geological &                                                                
                      Geophysical Surveys                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:03:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO  announced that the  next order of  business is                                                               
an overview by  the Department of Natural  Resources, Division of                                                               
Geological & Geophysical Surveys.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:03:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
STEVEN  MASTERMAN CPG,  State  Geologist,  Director, Division  of                                                               
Geological &  Geophysical Surveys  (DGGS), Department  of Natural                                                               
Resources (DNR),  began his PowerPoint  overview of  the Division                                                               
of Geological & Geophysical Surveys  (DGGS) by turning to slide 2                                                               
and  noting that  the  division's mission  is  to evaluate  state                                                               
lands for their potential to  host energy, resources, and mineral                                                               
resources  primarily;  to  look   at  location  and  supplies  of                                                               
groundwater   and  construction   materials;   and  to   evaluate                                                               
geological hazards  around the state.   To do this,  the division                                                               
has divided its staff into sections.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN  explained how  the  division  views this  mission                                                               
[slide 3].   He  said the  division views  its role  as providing                                                               
geoscience information  to foster mineral and  energy development                                                               
around  the state.   This  is critical  because it  produces many                                                               
rural  jobs as  well  as  revenue to  the  state.   The  division                                                               
provides   information  that   helps  to   reduce  the   cost  of                                                               
construction around  the state, especially in  rural communities.                                                               
The division  provides information  to reduce  the risk  from the                                                               
state's many  geologic hazards,  such as  volcanoes, earthquakes,                                                               
permafrost,  flooding, and  landslides.    The division  provides                                                               
information to  help businesses, communities, and  Alaskans build                                                               
and accommodate  those features in  their designs.   Another role                                                               
is to make the public aware  of all the geologic information that                                                               
is available,  most all of  which is available on  the division's                                                               
web  site.    The  division manages  the  state's  collection  of                                                               
geologic  materials  [through   its  Geologic  Materials  Center,                                                               
currently  housed in  Eagle River  but  soon to  be relocated  to                                                               
Anchorage.   He said this  collection is incredibly  valuable for                                                               
the potential  for future  explorers to  find energy  and mineral                                                               
resources based on the samples held in that repository.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:05:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN outlined  the division's  six sections  [slide 4],                                                               
noting the division  has 42 permanent staff.  He  said the Energy                                                               
Resources  Section evaluates  state lands  for energy  resources.                                                               
The Mineral  Resources Section evaluates state  lands for mineral                                                               
resources.     The   Engineering  Geology   Section  deals   with                                                               
engineering geology,  geological hazards,  fault-related hazards,                                                               
tsunamis,   landslide,  and   permafrost-related  issues.     The                                                               
Volcanology Section  cooperates with  the U.S.  Geological Survey                                                               
(USGS)  and  the  Geophysical Institute  [at  the  University  of                                                               
Alaska Fairbanks]  to form the  Alaska Volcano Observatory.   The                                                               
observatory's  mission  is  to monitor  and  report  on  volcanic                                                               
activity around  the state.  The  Geologic Communications Section                                                               
manages  all  of  the  division's  data,  publishes  all  of  the                                                               
division's reports,  and makes all of  that information available                                                               
to the public  via the division's web site.   The last section is                                                               
the [aforementioned] Geologic Materials Center.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN said the Energy  Section's full-time staff of seven                                                               
people are  focused primarily on  the major energy basins  on the                                                               
North Slope and  in Cook Inlet [slide 5].   He explained that the                                                               
green  boxes  on the  map  of  Alaska  are called  the  "frontier                                                               
basins"  and the  red ovals  are  the Susitna  and Nenana  basins                                                               
where work is  also being conducted.  He pointed  out that, based                                                               
on  the section's  work, the  discovery of  a single  100 million                                                               
barrel field  would return about  $3.5 billion in revenue  to the                                                               
state over the life of the field at a price of $100 per barrel.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:08:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN reviewed Alaska's  hydrocarbon resources [slide 6],                                                               
relating that  according to  USGS estimates  the North  Slope has                                                               
about 40 billion barrels  of undiscovered technically recoverable                                                               
conventional oil resources.  To  date about 17 billion barrels of                                                               
oil  have been  produced.   The USGS  further estimates  that the                                                               
North  Slope has  over 200  trillion cubic  feet of  undiscovered                                                               
natural gas in  conventional reservoirs.  There are  also tens of                                                               
billions of  barrels of oil  in unconventional and in  heavy oil,                                                               
as well as hundreds of trillions  of cubic feet of natural gas in                                                               
unconventional  types of  formations like  shale gas,  tight gas,                                                               
gas hydrates,  and coalbed methane.   The amount  of hydrocarbons                                                               
on the North  Slope is therefore staggering with a  lot yet to be                                                               
discovered.   Likewise,  he  continued, in  Cook  Inlet the  USGS                                                               
estimates that  there is 19  trillion cubic feet  of undiscovered                                                               
technically recoverable  natural gas.   To date about  8 trillion                                                               
cubic feet have  been produced.  He further noted  that Alaska is                                                               
quite  underexplored in  relation to  the Lower  48 states.   For                                                               
example, the  North Slope has  600 exploration wells  as compared                                                               
to 19,000 in  Wyoming, and the North Slope and  Wyoming are close                                                               
to the same size.  He said he  thinks that if the North Slope was                                                               
to get  to Wyoming's level of  drilling a lot of  these resources                                                               
would be discovered and produced.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:10:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN discussed  the division's  North Slope  objectives                                                               
[slide  7],  saying one  objective  is  to stimulate  exploration                                                               
because discoveries  will help to fill  the Trans-Alaska Pipeline                                                               
System  and drive  state  revenues.   Therefore  the division  is                                                               
completing geologic mapping on the  North Slope and doing work on                                                               
conventional  and unconventional  plays.   Detailed stratigraphic                                                               
work is being  done to try to understand how  the formations were                                                               
laid down  and how  they have evolved  over time  - understanding                                                               
the  geology is  what  leads  to discovery.    By providing  this                                                               
publically  available  geological  information to  everybody  the                                                               
division hopes  to be able  to drive  that discovery.   Right now                                                               
the focus is on oil on the  North Slope because, until there is a                                                               
gasline and  gas reserves are  looking in short supply,  there is                                                               
not much  reason for the division  to spend much time  working on                                                               
gas on the North Slope.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  described recent North  Slope projects  [slide 8].                                                               
One project,  he said, was  the publishing of some  geologic maps                                                               
and  cross sections  around the  North  Slope.   The division  is                                                               
currently  working  on  producing   a  couple  more  North  Slope                                                               
geologic maps.  The division  is also working in conjunction with                                                               
the  university  on  a  project  for shale  oil  in  the  Shublik                                                               
Formation and in the Hue Shale.   Planned work on the North Slope                                                               
includes  the   Stimulating  Exploration  initiative.     A  very                                                               
successful lease sale was held by  the Division of Oil & Gas last                                                               
fall.   It was the  third best lease sale  in the history  of the                                                               
North Slope, indicating  there is still a lot of  interest in the                                                               
North  Slope  and the  state  has  an  opportunity right  now  to                                                               
stimulate  exploration up  there and  bring more  players in  and                                                               
help them  be more successful.   The division is also  working to                                                               
complete geologic  mapping in the  Foothills area and  looking at                                                               
less  conventional resources  like tight  formations and  heavier                                                               
oils.   Mr. Masterman  displayed slide 9,  saying that  these are                                                               
the areas  on the  North Slope  that his  division would  like to                                                               
map.  The area yet to map on  the North Slope is huge and it will                                                               
take roughly 12 years to complete the mapping.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:13:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN drew attention to  slide 10, stating the division's                                                               
focus in  Cook Inlet  is to ensure  a stable gas  supply.   A few                                                               
years  ago, he  recalled,  the conversation  was  about how  Cook                                                               
Inlet was running  out of gas, there were going  to be brownouts,                                                               
and utilities  were concerned there  would not be enough  gas for                                                               
electrical  generation of  home heating.   Through  a variety  of                                                               
initiatives, one  which was the  publishing and  making available                                                               
of additional  geological information, DNR was  able to encourage                                                               
exploration and  development in the Cook  Inlet.  Now there  is a                                                               
pretty stable gas supply, so  the initiative was very successful.                                                               
ConocoPhillips  recently  restarted  its  liquefied  natural  gas                                                               
(LNG) plant  and Agrium is  looking at restarting  its fertilizer                                                               
plant.  Now that  there is more gas known in  Cook Inlet and more                                                               
reserves,  industry is  responding by  looking at  utilizing that                                                               
gas.  The  Donlin Mine is looking at constructing  a gasline from                                                               
Cook Inlet  to its  project on the  Kuskokwim River,  which would                                                               
consume  a  substantial  amount  of  gas.    There  is  also  the                                                               
possibility that Cook Inlet gas  would be brought up to Fairbanks                                                               
instead of bringing  it down from the North Slope.   These things                                                               
will place increased  demand on the Cook Inlet Basin,  so it will                                                               
be  important  for  the  division   to  maintain  the  supply  of                                                               
information  to the  explorers so  that they  can continue  to be                                                               
successful and keep that gas.   Until there is a gasline from the                                                               
North  Slope, pretty  much  "all  the gas  eggs  will  be in  one                                                               
basket".  Regarding  oil in the Cook Inlet, said  the division is                                                               
looking  at the  potential  for alternative  types  of plays  and                                                               
unconventional plays.  In the  basin there is the possibility for                                                               
some  structural plays.   The  division  is also  looking at  the                                                               
timing of oil formation in the  basin and seeing how that relates                                                               
to the  consolidation of the rocks  because that will tell  a lot                                                               
about where, or  where not, to expect to  have oil accumulations.                                                               
There is some  industry interest in that work,  especially in the                                                               
structural play.   Hilcorp is looking at that itself  on the west                                                               
side of Cook Inlet.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:16:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  turned to  slide 11,  reporting that  the division                                                               
recently completed  a draft  geological map on  the west  side of                                                               
the Iniskin Peninsula.  In  that work the division discovered two                                                               
new oil-stained  outcrops, sparking some exploration  interest on                                                               
that side  of the Cook  Inlet Basin.   The division  is currently                                                               
finishing  that map  and  finishing the  Tyonek  map, a  previous                                                               
project.   In summer 2015 the  division will again be  mapping on                                                               
the  west side  of Cook  Inlet between  Tuxedni Bay  and Chinitna                                                               
Bay, the area that has the  best exposure of the oil source rocks                                                               
for the  Cook Inlet.   Those units will  be looked at  closely to                                                               
try to  understand how the basin  evolved and how the  oil formed                                                               
and migrated  out of  those rocks.   The  division would  like to                                                               
continue its  work on  the west  side of  Cook Inlet  and migrate                                                               
further south going down to  the northern Alaska Peninsula.  Once                                                               
the surface  mapping is complete,  information needs to  be taken                                                               
from the  subsurface.  The  surface mapping, the bore  holes, and                                                               
the seismic  data will be  combined to start generating  a three-                                                               
dimensional  (3-D) view  of the  basin so  people can  understand                                                               
more  completely its  evolution and  where the  traps may  be and                                                               
where the source  rocks are.  He reiterated that  the division is                                                               
focused  on providing  information to  industry to  help industry                                                               
with  its exploration.   He  said slide  12 depicts  some of  the                                                               
areas that the division is looking  at and mapping in Cook Inlet.                                                               
It will take 15 or more  years to complete this mapping, and that                                                               
is on top of the time in the North Slope.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:18:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN brought  attention to slide 13,  noting the Susitna                                                               
Basin  can be  looked at  in some  ways as  an extension  of Cook                                                               
Inlet.  There is a lot of gas  in the Susitna Basin, he said, and                                                               
the division is looking at the  potential of the coal seams there                                                               
to host  gas in terms of  coalbed methane.  Those  coal seams are                                                               
thick and  have been the  source of most of  the gas in  the Cook                                                               
Inlet Basin,  so there  is a  good chance  that the  Susitna coal                                                               
seams could host coalbed methane resources.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  said Nenana Basin  (slide 14) is  more challenging                                                               
because  it doesn't  have a  lot of  outcrop and  is basically  a                                                               
swamp.   The division is  therefore looking  at the rocks  in the                                                               
margins and working  as closely as possible  with Doyon, Limited.                                                               
The division is currently funding  a graduate student through the                                                               
university who  has set out a  series of seismic stations  in the                                                               
basin to  look at the seismicity.   From that the  division hopes                                                               
to understand  the structural evolution  of the Nenana  Basin and                                                               
get a  better understanding of where  some of the traps  might be                                                               
for the oil and gas accumulations in that basin.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN addressed  local energy  use [slide  15], relating                                                               
that  a  couple of  years  ago  the  division  put out  a  report                                                               
[entitled, "FOSSIL  FUEL AND GEOTHERMAL ENERGY  SOURCES FOR LOCAL                                                               
USE  IN  ALASKA:    Summary   of  Available  Information"].    He                                                               
explained  that the  report breaks  the state  into a  variety of                                                               
areas and looks at the potential  local energy sources in each of                                                               
those  areas.   He said  slide  16 synthesizes  the local  energy                                                               
sources  in  the  report  and   this  synthesis  is  basically  a                                                               
guidebook of where to go and  what to look for by area throughout                                                               
the state.   A  red box on  the chart means  it is  an identified                                                               
resource at,  or close  to, one  or more of  the communities.   A                                                               
green box indicates that further  work is warranted because there                                                               
may be  a potential for resources,  and a blue box  indicates the                                                               
division's view that no further work is warranted at this time.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:20:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  moved to slide  17, noting the division  does some                                                               
work on geothermal energy, as  well as coal resources, around the                                                               
state.  This year the division  begins work on an energy database                                                               
in which all of the analytical  data will be put together for oil                                                               
and  gas wells  for the  quality  of the  reservoirs:   porosity,                                                               
permeability,  thermal evolution,  organic  content.   This  will                                                               
allow people  to readily retrieve  any of that  information about                                                               
any area, which will be a great help to the explorers.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  discussed the  question of  where the  division is                                                               
going in  a broad  sense [slide  18].  He  said the  division is:                                                               
looking at  increasing the availability of  public geologic data;                                                               
focusing  on oil  on  the  North Slope  and  gas  in Cook  Inlet;                                                               
completing mapping of  the North Slope and Cook Inlet  basins - a                                                               
long term  goal that  will take about  30 years;  and integrating                                                               
the surface and  subsurface data to provide  a comprehensive view                                                               
of how these basins currently sit.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN turned to slide  19, reiterating that the discovery                                                               
of a  single 100 million  barrel field will return  a substantial                                                               
amount of  funding to the  state.  He said  it will take  over 30                                                               
years to  complete the  current projects.   Sharing  his personal                                                               
view, he stressed that this is  critical work for the state to do                                                               
because oil  must be kept  flowing through the pipeline  in order                                                               
to keep state revenues.  In  his mind, this work is arguably more                                                               
critical than the many other things the state does, he said.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:23:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN said  slide 20 lays out the rationale  in regard to                                                               
the questions of  why the state needs to provide  public data and                                                               
why does  the state not  save money by letting  industry generate                                                               
this  data.   Right  now,  he pointed  out,  large companies  are                                                               
selling assets to smaller companies  and smaller companies do not                                                               
have  the  same  deep  bench of  geologists,  geophysicists,  and                                                               
technical staff  found in  companies like  Shell, ConocoPhillips,                                                               
and BP.  So, these smaller  companies place a greater reliance on                                                               
publically  available information.    Once the  state makes  this                                                               
information public it is public  for everybody, and people coming                                                               
into the  state do  not have  to spend  the money  to re-generate                                                               
this information  for themselves, basically reducing  the cost of                                                               
exploration and helping remove barriers  to exploration.  This is                                                               
stimulative, he said, and helps bring explorers to the state.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:24:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  OLSON   inquired  whether  Alaska   is  competing                                                               
against  Newfoundland and  Nova Scotia,  which have  produced 3-D                                                               
analyses for  their provinces and  made it available for  free to                                                               
any qualified bidder.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MARK MYERS, Commissioner, Department  of Natural Resources (DNR),                                                               
confirmed  that other  parts of  the world  produce explorer  and                                                               
license  packages.   They have  this ability  because either  the                                                               
government has  paid for  the seismic or  they have  a regulatory                                                               
structure that  allows the  seismic data to  be released.   Under                                                               
Alaska statute, seismic  data cannot be released  publically - it                                                               
must  be voluntarily  released or  shot with  public money.   The                                                               
USGS has shot  seismic data, a crude grid, and  some of that USGS                                                               
data  is  releasable.    Occasionally  the  industry  allows  the                                                               
release of a line  or two.  The Division of Oil  & Gas has access                                                               
to that  data.  The  Division of Geological &  Geophysical Survey                                                               
can only have  access under special conditions where  there is an                                                               
agreement, but the  data cannot be released  confidentially.  So,                                                               
[DNR]  is really  limited in  its ability  to produce  those high                                                               
quality products.   However, in  the last decade the  Division of                                                               
Geological & Geophysical Survey  has made significant advances of                                                               
bringing  in  people that  have  qualified  capacity to  look  at                                                               
seismic  data, have  worked in  the industry,  or have  worked in                                                               
other agencies that  are using this high quality  data, which has                                                               
improved  the ability  to  link the  subsurface  and the  surface                                                               
geology.   While  they are  doing it,  the dataset  they have  is                                                               
limited  and therefore  nice  3-D maps  cannot  be produced  like                                                               
those that the Division of Oil  & Gas produces on a regular basis                                                               
and which have to stay confidential.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  OLSON concurred  that Nova  Scotia is  paying for                                                               
[the analyses],  and said that  the cost  is built back  into the                                                               
packets that are purchased so that Nova Scotia recoups the cost.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:27:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON  observed on  slide 11 that  the geology                                                               
of the  Bruin Bay fault  zone is a  current project.   He further                                                               
observed that  Bruin Bay is  identified on  the map on  slide 12.                                                               
He said  he was in  Bruin Bay last August  and it looks  like the                                                               
bay  is near  McNeil  [River State  Game  Sanctuary and  Refuge],                                                               
which relates to what he was  asking of Mr. Goodrum.  He surmised                                                               
the mapping is  being done to look for potential  for oil and gas                                                               
or mineral development.   He asked whether [the  mapping of Bruin                                                               
Bay] is so that if there is a  find in that area, a debate can be                                                               
had with as many facts as possible.   He said he is curious about                                                               
this issue of competing land uses  - the McNeil Sanctuary and how                                                               
DNR deals  with those  things -  and inquired as  to what  is the                                                               
plan given this massive sanctuary to the north of Kamishak Bay.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN answered that mapping  is being done in these areas                                                               
because they  are the  only areas  where the  rocks can  be seen.                                                               
Since  the inlet  is underwater  and surface  exposure cannot  be                                                               
seen, mapping must be done where  the rocks can be seen.  Mapping                                                               
is intended to educate the  division and everybody else about the                                                               
geology of  the petroleum system and  of the basin.   To get that                                                               
understanding the  division must look  wherever the rocks  can be                                                               
seen.   Most  of  the area  being mapped  this  coming summer  is                                                               
inside [Katmai National  Park and Preserve].   While the division                                                               
is obviously  not looking  at doing  any development  there, that                                                               
information helps to understand the overall petroleum system.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON asked whether  this includes the area around                                                               
Fossil Point, which is behind Chisik Island and inside the park.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  replied that he  believes Fossil Point  is inside,                                                               
or close to, the area the division is mapping.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  OLSON  said  he  is asking  because  fossils  are                                                               
falling off those cliffs, so there is some real history there.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN said  the division has a  good working relationship                                                               
with the National  Park Service, which has  been very cooperative                                                               
and easy to work with.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:30:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  NAGEAK  inquired  whether this  is  mostly  proprietary                                                               
information or public  information.  He further  asked whether it                                                               
could become proprietary information if someone paid for it.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  responded that most of  the division's information                                                               
is publically available - all  of the division's reports are made                                                               
public.  Occasionally the  division uses proprietary information;                                                               
in that  circumstance the division  uses the information  to help                                                               
generate its final product, but  doesn't release that proprietary                                                               
information when it  makes its final product public.   In further                                                               
response, he  said he doesn't  believe that the division  has any                                                               
state  proprietary information.    It would  only be  information                                                               
that was provided  to the division by industry  that the division                                                               
would require  to keep confidential for  a period of time  or for                                                               
perpetuity.   He further confirmed  that most of  the information                                                               
is publically available.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:31:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN brought  attention to  slide 21,  noting that  the                                                               
Mineral Resources  Section, with its  permanent staff of  six, is                                                               
tasked with  evaluating state land  for the production  of metals                                                               
and minerals.   Over  the past  20 years,  this section  has been                                                               
flying airborne geophysical  surveys nearly every year.   It does                                                               
geochemical surveys, which is the  sampling of streams and rocks,                                                               
and that  information is  released to the  public.   This section                                                               
does detailed geological mapping, usually  in the areas where the                                                               
geophysical  surveys have  been flown.   This  section also  does                                                               
mineral  deposit  investigations  and provides  this  information                                                               
through the division's web site.   [The Geologic Materials Center                                                               
is also under this section.]                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN turned to slide  22, stating Alaska is a storehouse                                                               
of  minerals.   He  said Alaska  has 5  percent  of the  nation's                                                               
mineral  production,  but  20  percent  of  its  landmass,  which                                                               
indicates  that Alaska  should have  four times  as much  mineral                                                               
production than it  does.  The 600 mining  companies surveyed for                                                               
the 2013 Frasier Institute Survey  ranked Alaska first in mineral                                                               
potential of the 112 jurisdictions  that were ranked.  Alaska has                                                               
17 percent of the world's coal,  4 percent of the world's copper,                                                               
3 percent  of the  world's lead,  [and 8  percent of  the world's                                                               
gold,  5 percent  of  the  world's zinc,  and  2  percent of  the                                                               
world's  silver].    Alaska is  currently  the  nation's  largest                                                               
producer of  zinc and silver  and the second largest  producer of                                                               
lead and gold.   Despite having 4 percent of  the world's copper,                                                               
Alaska  currently   really  doesn't  produce  any   copper.    He                                                               
maintained that Alaska has a  bright future in copper production,                                                               
with  the  Pebble deposit  alone  having  billions of  pounds  of                                                               
copper.  He displayed a map  of Alaska superimposed over a map of                                                               
the Lower 48  (slide 23), reporting that according  to the latest                                                               
USGS  statistics,   Alaska  is   first  in  per   capita  mineral                                                               
production,  but forty-third  in per  area production.   He  said                                                               
Alaska should  have, and will have,  a lot more large  mines than                                                               
it currently does.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:34:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR NAGEAK,  regarding mineral production  versus potential,                                                               
surmised Alaska  would overtake or  become equal to areas  in the                                                               
Lower 48 if it were to begin mining.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  answered correct, stating that  Alaska ranks fifth                                                               
in total  mineral production  in the nation  in terms  of dollars                                                               
produced.   Last  year a  little over  $3 billion  in metals  was                                                               
produced.   By having more large  mines Alaska would move  up and                                                               
overtake  some of  the other  states.   In  further response,  he                                                               
confirmed that Alaska clearly has  this potential to overtake the                                                               
other states.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:35:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON  understood that  the state's  tax share                                                               
of the $3 billion in minerals produced was $94 million.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN replied  he is  unsure  of the  exact number,  but                                                               
explained  that part  of  the issue  with  mineral production  is                                                               
where the  mines are located.   There are six large  mines in the                                                               
state, he  said.  Red  Dog Mine  is on NANA  Regional Corporation                                                               
land, so  royalties from  that mine  go to  NANA.   Usibelli Coal                                                               
Mine, Inc., Fort Knox, and Pogo  are on state land, but Fort Knox                                                               
is  on Mental  Health Trust  land so  those royalties  go to  the                                                               
trust.   Greens Creek  and Kensington  mines in  Southeast Alaska                                                               
are  on federal  land, so  the state  does not  receive royalties                                                               
from those.   Thus, Usibelli  and Pogo  are the only  large mines                                                               
that are state  land.  The state owns 100  million acres, roughly                                                               
one-fourth of  the land  surface in  the state.   So,  all things                                                               
being equal, one  might think that one-fourth of  the mines would                                                               
fall on state land.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOSEPHSON surmised  there is  no 90/10  split for                                                               
minerals on federal land, like is done for oil and gas.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN deferred to Mr. Fogels.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
EDMUND FOGELS,  Deputy Commissioner, Office of  the Commissioner,                                                               
Department of  Natural Resources (DNR), confirmed  the state does                                                               
not  receive royalties  from the  two Southeast  Alaska mines  on                                                               
federal land.   He said those mines  are significant contributors                                                               
to the local economy of the City and Borough of Juneau.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  NAGEAK  commented  that  federal mining  laws  must  be                                                               
honored.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:38:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON observed the  statement on slide 23 that                                                               
says, "Alaska  should have many  more large  mines".  He  said he                                                               
hopes the Alaska people get to  make that decision.  He expressed                                                               
his concern about takings, saying that  is why he asked about the                                                               
classifications.  He queried whether  the state has opened itself                                                               
up to takings arguments - where  the state offers a lease that is                                                               
accepted, which  is a contract,  and then the state  changes that                                                               
by adding  new regulations, resulting  in a legal claim  that the                                                               
state  has  interfered with  the  economic  interest.   He  asked                                                               
whether the  cart is  getting before the  horse, the  horse being                                                               
the public  and public  buy-in.  Clearly,  he said,  Alaska could                                                               
have more mines,  but they come when the people  want them and he                                                               
thinks that in Fort Knox and  Pogo there has been that buy-in and                                                               
for Red  Dog there has definitely  been that buy-in.   He said he                                                               
hopes that is what the department focuses on.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN [deferred to Mr. Fogels].                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. FOGELS  responded that when  the department gets  state land,                                                               
one of  the first things  done is to plan  for it.   An extensive                                                               
public  planning  process  is   undergone  with  multiple  public                                                               
meetings.  The other departments  and divisions tell DNR what the                                                               
resource values are on that state  land.  The public is then told                                                               
what is available  on that land and asked how  the land should be                                                               
classified.  More  often than not, there  are multiple overlaying                                                               
classifications  -  minerals,  forestry,  and  wildlife  habitat.                                                               
Occasionally,  DNR  finds  land  so  valuable  for  fisheries  or                                                               
wildlife  habitat  that  it  recommends the  land  be  set  aside                                                               
legislatively  and  then  suddenly  the uses  of  that  land  get                                                               
restricted.  The  rest of the state land  is largely multiple-use                                                               
land open to  mineral entry, but just because it  is multiple use                                                               
and open to  mineral entry does not necessarily  mean that mining                                                               
can happen  there.   An entirely  separate process  happens after                                                               
that  where DNR  has environmental  analysis and  40-50 different                                                               
permits that all  have their own public processes,  so the public                                                               
will always  get to  weigh in.   The intent is  that most  of the                                                               
state lands are multiple use.   The department's job is to figure                                                               
out what  should happen there and  how to make each  thing happen                                                               
with minimal impact on the other resources.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:42:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  addressed slide 24,  stating Alaska does  not have                                                               
as many mines  as it could because there is  not the information.                                                               
Currently, only  about 17  percent of  Alaska's land  surface has                                                               
been geologically  mapped at an  adequate scale.  At  the present                                                               
rate of  progress it will  take about  400 years to  complete it.                                                               
The unmapped area of Alaska is  equal to the combined landmass of                                                               
California,  Nevada, Utah,  and  Arizona.   Turning  to slide  25                                                               
depicting the state's  main mineral belts, he said  the mines and                                                               
most major  projects are  hosted within  these belts.   Northwest                                                               
Alaska is  extremely well-endowed with  the base metals  of lead,                                                               
zinc, and  copper.  The Tintina  Gold Belt is a  world-class belt                                                               
of gold deposits in which  the surface has barely been scratched.                                                               
It  hosts Pogo  at 10  million ounces,  Fort Knox  at 10  million                                                               
ounces,  Livengood at  20 million  ounces, Donlin  at 40  million                                                               
ounces, and  Golden Summit.   The Alaska Range contains  a series                                                               
of lead/zinc deposits  in the Delta district and  north of Healy.                                                               
The Alaska Porphyry  Belt has a bright future and  is where there                                                               
will  be copper  mines.   Southeast Alaska  is well  endowed with                                                               
base  metals:    Greens  Creek is  the  nation's  largest  silver                                                               
producer, Palmer and Niblack are  advanced projects, and there is                                                               
the  Kensington gold  mine.   Moving to  slide 26,  Mr. Masterman                                                               
noted  that Alaska's  production is  a lot  less than  its global                                                               
share suggests.  The commodities  where Alaska could be producing                                                               
more include coal, gold, and copper.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:46:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN  said slide 27  is an example  of the kind  of data                                                               
that the  division produces.   He  noted that  the [geochemistry]                                                               
data on  this slide  was published  last summer  and is  from the                                                               
Wrangell Mountains  and the Talkeetna  Mountains.  It  shows rock                                                               
samples and  stream samples,  and the elements  that he  chose to                                                               
show on  the slide  are gold,  arsenic, platinum,  and palladium.                                                               
He pointed out that mining companies can get this information.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN turned to slide  28, noting airborne geophysics are                                                               
key to  understanding the geology.   Moving to slide 31,  he said                                                               
there is not  much rock exposure in the  state. However, airborne                                                               
geophysics sees through the soil  and vegetation to tell what the                                                               
magnetic  and  resistivity properties  of  the  rocks are,  which                                                               
allows the  division to make better  geologic maps.  He  read the                                                               
statement on  slide 31  by a  gentleman from  International Tower                                                               
Hill  Mines:     "It  was  the  combination   of  structural  and                                                               
stratigraphic ideas  that came out  of the state  mapping program                                                               
that first  led to  our exploration  through the  Cambrian thrust                                                               
sheet  and  eventually   the  discovery  of  the   main  body  of                                                               
mineralization.    There  is  no   question  that  the  data  was                                                               
instrumental to the  discovery.  The state  geophysical data over                                                               
Livengood continues  to aid us  in our evaluation of  the mineral                                                               
system."   He said  geophysics was  instrumental in  the division                                                               
understanding  the geology  and  when that  information was  made                                                               
available to the  mining companies they used it  and succeeded in                                                               
finding 20 million ounces of gold.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:48:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN reviewed  the Engineering  Geology Section  (slide                                                               
36),  pointing out  that  this diverse  group  works on  geologic                                                               
hazards around the  state.  He said the coastal  areas of Western                                                               
Alaska are currently being worked on.   These areas are being hit                                                               
hard by  changes in climate -  the sea ice doesn't  form as early                                                               
as it used  to and fall storms are really  damaging some of those                                                               
local communities.  The division  is working collaboratively with                                                               
the National  Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration  (NOAA), the                                                               
National  Weather  Service, and  the  USGS  on programs  to  help                                                               
understand what is happening in those communities.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN highlighted  the Volcanology  Section (slide  46),                                                               
saying  that in  November [2014]  the Alaska  Volcano Observatory                                                               
notified  the Federal  Aviation  Administration  (FAA), the  U.S.                                                               
military, and local communities about  the eruption of the Pavlof                                                               
volcano.  This group ensures  that the flying communities and the                                                               
military  don't repeat  what almost  happened with  a KLM  flight                                                               
quite a few years ago.  All  52 active volcanoes in the state are                                                               
monitored  and when  one  erupts in  a  sufficiently violent  and                                                               
vigorous manor  the group notifies  the FAA, military,  and local                                                               
communities to ensure people don't fly through the ash cloud.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN  drew attention  to  slide  52, stating  that  the                                                               
geological  communications  group is  the  glue  that sticks  the                                                               
division together  and provides  all of  the information  that is                                                               
generated  to  the public.    In  the  early 2000s  the  division                                                               
transitioned from  releasing the  information as paper  copies to                                                               
releasing the  information via the  internet.  The  division used                                                               
to distribute  about 10,000  paper copies  per year,  now 400,000                                                               
maps  and reports  are distributed  per year.   The  web site  is                                                               
getting increased use and is  growing at roughly one million page                                                               
views per year, reaching seven million views in 2014.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:52:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR NAGEAK said he wants a  road to his house because of the                                                               
potential for  mineral activity in his  area.  Such a  road would                                                               
allow development of the resources just discussed.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN responded  that the USGS estimates  there are eight                                                               
billion barrels of recoverable oil in the 1002 area.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:53:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN, responding  to Representative Josephson, explained                                                               
that  the term  "recoverable oil"  means the  oil is  technically                                                               
recoverable.  It  means there are accumulations  of oil estimated                                                               
to be over a certain size  threshold, he said, which he thinks is                                                               
over 50 million barrels [on the  North Slope] and the estimate is                                                               
an average estimate.  No  economics are applied to that recovery.                                                               
A study done by the  USGS in approximately 2008 applied economics                                                               
to that  recovery and the USGS  concluded that at $16  per barrel                                                               
there would be  no economically recoverable oil in  the 1002 area                                                               
of the  Arctic National Wildlife  Refuge.   If the price  was $17                                                               
per barrel  there would  be one  billion barrels  of economically                                                               
recoverable oil.   Obviously, as the price goes up  the number of                                                               
barrels that are economically recoverable increases.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:55:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON, referring  to slide  9, inquired  whether                                                               
the  division is  doing geophysical  work in  the areas  that are                                                               
already leased or in areas that have not been leased.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MASTERMAN  replied  that  the   division  does  not  do  any                                                               
geophysical work  for oil  and gas exploration  because it  is so                                                               
far beyond  the division's  budget.  A  3-D seismic  survey might                                                               
cost  $10-$20 million  and  the division's  entire  budget is  $5                                                               
million.   The  division looks  at  and tries  to understand  the                                                               
geology,  in this  case  the  geology of  the  shale  oils.   The                                                               
division  tries to  understand how  they are  formed, what  their                                                               
organic content  is, what their  thermal evolution has  been, and                                                               
where  they are  in the  oil window  to help  companies find  the                                                               
sweet spot,  which is  where the  shales have  gone into  the oil                                                               
window but haven't  been cooked too much and where  they might be                                                               
sufficiently hard  to be hydraulically  fractured.   The division                                                               
tries to provide information more  on a basin-wide type of system                                                               
than on a particular prospect for a particular company.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:57:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON drew attention  to slide 16, observing that                                                               
it only  mentions potential  local energy  resources for  oil and                                                               
gas and  does not include peat  resources.  He asked  whether the                                                               
division identifies the peat resources across the state.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. MASTERMAN responded  that peat would be part of  the work the                                                               
division  does on  coal.   In  further response,  he  said he  is                                                               
unaware  of the  division  publishing  any maps  on  peat in  the                                                               
recent past.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  said he is  bringing up the topic  of peat                                                               
because  it  was identified  as  a  local  source of  energy  for                                                               
communities.   A law was passed  to make it available,  but there                                                               
has not been much  push on it and he is  trying to assess whether                                                               
DNR is moving forward on that as a local energy supply.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER MYERS replied that there  are a lot of other efforts                                                               
going on in the state.   Peat is really looking at vegetation and                                                               
vegetation  is a  biomass issue.    There are  also wind  energy,                                                               
hydrokinetic,  and  regular  hydro-type  energy  supplies.    The                                                               
Division of  Geological & Geophysical  Surveys really  doesn't do                                                               
much  with  those particular  resources,  but  DNR is  leading  a                                                               
mapping  effort in  the  state.   The  statewide digital  mapping                                                               
effort  is  a  first  step  of  getting  the  elevation  data  to                                                               
understand  what  the  vegetation  and   soil  types  are.    The                                                               
university is  working with hyperspectral  surveys that  can tell                                                               
that information.  Understanding habitat  and identifying it is a                                                               
critical piece  with respect to  biomass.  So, DNR  touches parts                                                               
of those pieces but the  coordinated state effort has really been                                                               
through  the Alaska  Energy Authority  (AEA) to  identify in  the                                                               
broader base resources.  Geologic  surveys traditionally have not                                                               
focused on living biomass, although  peat is sometimes done.  The                                                               
soil science  piece of this  is a really important  component and                                                               
the  Division  of  Agriculture  does   some  work  on  that,  but                                                               
fundamentally a  lot of work  hasn't been  done.  There  are some                                                               
gaps there, he  allowed, in terms of how the  resources are being                                                               
looked at holistically.   He added that the  Division of Forestry                                                               
and  the university  are looking  at biomass,  not peat,  because                                                               
biomass is a critical component.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON remarked  that peat  drops in  the middle.                                                               
It is  not really  biomass, it  is not  considered a  forestry or                                                               
coal product,  and it  is not  oil or  gas, but  it is  an energy                                                               
resource that could  be available to local communities.   He said                                                               
there has  not been the  stimulation of peat which  could provide                                                               
local employment in the obtaining and utilizing of that.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:01:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON  recalled that  he recently read  of someone                                                               
finally producing  hydrates in commercial  quantities.   He asked                                                               
whether Commissioner Myers has heard anything about this.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  MYERS answered  he has  not and  is unaware  of any                                                               
commercial production.   He said the state has  continued to work                                                               
on a  North Slope test  for a  long-term production test  and has                                                               
withheld some acreage  near Prudhoe Bay known to  be hydrate rich                                                               
but not  currently leased.  Two  days ago he met  with the deputy                                                               
secretary of energy and some of  the folks working on the hydrate                                                               
program and it looks like  there will be funding, mostly Japanese                                                               
funding, to move forward if alignment can be made.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON added  that it was small amounts  but it was                                                               
being called commercial.  He believed  it was either the Far East                                                               
or Siberia.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER MYERS replied  there has been gas  production on the                                                               
Siberian side  that is  combined.   It is  thought to  be hydrate                                                               
contribution to  conventional gas,  he said,  and he  thinks that                                                               
production  has occurred  since the  1970s or  so in  the fields.                                                               
They may  well have deliberately  gotten into a hydrate  zone and                                                               
separate production, but he is not  aware of it.  In his opinion,                                                               
it is  a very critical  next step  to get this  long-term hydrate                                                               
test done.   There have been two short-term tests  in Alaska, one                                                               
injecting carbon dioxide  in the North Slope  recovery, which was                                                               
quite successful.   The second was a relatively  short test where                                                               
it is pressure.   The other mechanism is thermal  where energy is                                                               
put in  to release the  hydrate.  This next  test is going  to be                                                               
designed to  be longer term, he  said, and he is  optimistic that                                                               
something will be seen.  [The  department] has been unable to get                                                               
the U.S. interested, it is the  Japanese that have shown the most                                                               
interest  because  they have  a  significant  amount of  hydrates                                                               
offshore of  Japan.   India is  also very  interested.   The USGS                                                               
estimates  54  trillion  cubic  feet   of  hydrates  are  in  the                                                               
identified  area  and a  significant  portion  of that  underlies                                                               
Prudhoe  Bay,  Kuparuk, and  Milne  Point.    So,  it is  a  huge                                                               
potential resource that  in the long term is highly  likely to be                                                               
produced, but  there probably  won't be  production in  the short                                                               
term until there is gas moving off the North Slope.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:04:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no further business before the committee, the House                                                                 
Resources Standing Committee meeting was adjourned at 3:04 p.m.                                                                 

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
Briefing_Packet_ANWR_boundary.pdf HRES 2/4/2015 1:00:00 PM
ccpmap.pdf HRES 2/4/2015 1:00:00 PM
Division of Mining Land Water Overview 4 Feb 2015 HRES.pdf HRES 2/4/2015 1:00:00 PM
DGGS House Resources Feb 4 2015.pdf HRES 2/4/2015 1:00:00 PM
Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys