Close Menu
Core Bulletin

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Mali detains two dozen soldiers over alleged coup plot against junta

    August 10, 2025

    More countries added to UK’s ‘deport first’ scheme for foreign criminals | Crime

    August 10, 2025

    TikTok to replace trust and safety team in Germany with AI and outsourced labor | Technology

    August 10, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Core BulletinCore Bulletin
    Trending
    • Mali detains two dozen soldiers over alleged coup plot against junta
    • More countries added to UK’s ‘deport first’ scheme for foreign criminals | Crime
    • TikTok to replace trust and safety team in Germany with AI and outsourced labor | Technology
    • Nvidia China H20 chips
    • Ray Brooks, ‘Mr Benn’ Narrator and ‘The Knack … and How to Get It’ Actor, Dies at 86
    • I’m 15 and in love, but I have to walk on eggshells with my boyfriend. What can I do? | Relationships
    • Cardinals vs. Cubs prediction, odds, props, best bets: Free 2025 MLB picks for Sunday Night Baseball
    • News live: Netanyahu brands Australia ‘shameful’ for ‘marching into rabbit hole’ of recognising Palestinian statehood | Australia news
    Sunday, August 10
    • Home
    • Business
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Travel
    • World
    • Technology
    • Entertainment
    Core Bulletin
    Home»Business»‘Erasure of years of work’: outcry as White House moves to open Arctic reserve to oil and gas drilling | Alaska
    Business

    ‘Erasure of years of work’: outcry as White House moves to open Arctic reserve to oil and gas drilling | Alaska

    By Liam PorterAugust 9, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Telegram Email
    ‘Erasure of years of work’: outcry as White House moves to open Arctic reserve to oil and gas drilling | Alaska
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The Trump administration’s plan to expand oil and gas drilling in a 23m acre reserve on the Arctic Ocean is sparking an impassioned response, amid fears it threatens Arctic wildlife, undermines the subsistence rights of Alaska Natives and imperils one of the fastest-warming ecosystems on Earth.

    More than a quarter of a million people have responded to the 2 June proposal from the US Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to roll back protections on the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A), the largest tract of public land in the US.

    A man from Georgia described hearing from an oil company that an employee shot a mother polar bear after encountering her with two cubs in northern Alaska.

    “I beg you to reconsider … I’m just 18 years old and haven’t had a chance to see the real world yet,” said a teenager from Denmark. “This will make that impossible – if not in the whole world, then at least in the icy areas of our planet.”

    The staggering number of comments submitted during the two-month comment period showed the public was watching, said Andy Moderow, senior director of policy at the Alaska Wilderness League. “That’s a pretty large turnout of Americans saying this is not the direction we need in the Arctic.”

    The BLM rollback is part of a broad, rapid-fire regulatory push to industrialize the Alaskan Arctic, particularly the NPR-A. Weeks after proposing to strip protections from the reserve, the Department of Interior signaled it would adopt a management plan that would open 82% of the NPR-A to oil drilling. Two weeks ago, before the public comment period had ended, the BLM rescinded three other Biden-era documents protecting the reserve.

    The Alaska Wilderness League, an Alaska-focused conservation non-profit, said the administration’s decision to start dismantling protections for the NPR-A before the comment period concluded showed “a lack of interest in meaningfully reviewing any input before taking action to allow unfettered industrialization across this landscape”.

    Alaska Native groups, some of which have worked for years to secure protections for areas of the NPR-A, also expressed frustration.

    The Natural Petroleum Reserve-Alaska. Photograph: Florian Schulz/protectthearctic.org

    The rollback is “a coordinated erasure of years of work by Alaska Native communities”, said Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic in a press statement.

    “To have all the work we’ve done for the last two decades, trying to create important special areas with their unique biological features demonstrated by science, disregarded to allow full-force development is crazy to consider,” said Rosemary Ahtuangaruak, an activist and former mayor of Nuiqsut, Alaska, a village in the NPR-A.

    The BLM said in a statement it was working through all comments received on the 2024 NPR-A rule rescission, and that it would respond to substantive comments in the final rule.

    The White House referred the Guardian to the BLM when asked for comment.

    ‘Devastating’ change

    Under Trump, the Department of Interior has embarked on a push to promote resource extraction in the Arctic, vowing to expand oil and gas in the NPR-A, open oil leasing on the coastal plain of the Arctic national wildlife refuge, and advance a controversial mining road in the southern Brooks range.

    The total land in play from these proposals is nearly 25m acres (10m hectares) of Arctic ecosystem, an area larger than the state of Indiana. The NPR-A comprises the vast majority of this. The reserve supports home grounds for polar bears, calving areas for caribou, and habitat for millions of migratory birds from Africa and Europe, as well as the Americas.

    In 2023, the Biden administration began consultations with Alaska Native groups and other stakeholders to update existing rules on how the NPR-A should be managed.

    skip past newsletter promotion

    The planet’s most important stories. Get all the week’s environment news – the good, the bad and the essential

    Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

    after newsletter promotion

    These consultations led to the 2024 rule which the BLM now aims to rescind. That rule protects key areas in the NPR-A for subsistence use and habitat, including Teshekpuk Lake, the Utukok Uplands and the Colville River.

    Ahtuangaruak, who participated in the 2023 consultations, said removing these protections could be “very devastating rapidly”. She described a worsening ecological situation across the reserve, partly driven by existing oil development.

    Caribou herds were declining, she said, and some had shifted their migration patterns away from her village because of oil and gas development to the west of her village. Permafrost was thawing, causing freshwater Arctic lakes to drain. Ice roads separated caribou calves from caribou cows; polar bears struggled to den in the melting snowpack.

    Tim Fullman, a senior ecologist at the Wilderness Society, a US conservation non-profit, said that already-existing roads in the Alaskan Arctic had been shown to hinder caribou movement, at times delaying migrating animals for up to a month.

    Then there’s the perennial health impacts on communities from gas flaring in the NPR-A, which Ahtuangaruak said she began to notice in the early 2000s when she was a healthcare worker.

    “The flares, when there’d be 20 or more, there would be nights where people would have trouble breathing,” she said. “Babies would start to have events. There was one point where we had 20 babies develop respiratory distress and 10 of them were put on ventilators.”

    Oil for decades

    Thirty miles east of Nuiqsut, Ahtuangaruak’s village, is the ConocoPhillips Willow project, a drilling operation approved in March 2023 under the Biden administration. Still under construction, it is projected to come online in 2029. Once it begins to produce, Willow will be operational for at least 30 years, according to its environmental impact statement.

    The project is an example of the timeframe involved in the Arctic oil and gas projects the Trump administration is currently encouraging, says Moderow – spanning decades.

    “We’re not talking about oil next year. We’re talking about oil in 2050 and 2060 and beyond, when we need to move past it,” he said. The projects “could easily be pumping oil when babies born today are retiring in a climate that’s not livable if that oil is not blocked”.

    “It’s investing in production that’s going to be going on for decades, well past when we need to be at essentially net zero greenhouse gas emissions if we’re going to have a livable climate,” said Jeremy Lieb, a senior attorney at Earthjustice.

    alaska Arctic drilling Erasure gas House moves oil Open outcry Reserve white Work years
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Liam Porter
    • Website

    Liam Porter is a seasoned news writer at Core Bulletin, specializing in breaking news, technology, and business insights. With a background in investigative journalism, Liam brings clarity and depth to every piece he writes.

    Related Posts

    TikTok to replace trust and safety team in Germany with AI and outsourced labor | Technology

    August 10, 2025

    ‘I feel 20 years younger’: the joy of driving a convertible | Automotive industry

    August 10, 2025

    Companies aiding Trump’s immigration crackdown see ‘extraordinary’ revenues | Technology

    August 10, 2025

    ‘A lot of money to be made’: Paris hit with spate of €1m handbag heists | Paris

    August 10, 2025

    The Guardian view on climate finance: crumbling under a second Trump presidency | Editorial

    August 10, 2025

    Planning to post a video of your layoff online? You may want to think twice | Gene Marks

    August 10, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Don't Miss
    World

    Mali detains two dozen soldiers over alleged coup plot against junta

    August 10, 2025

    Malian authorities have arrested two dozen soldiers accused of plotting to overthrow the ruling junta,…

    More countries added to UK’s ‘deport first’ scheme for foreign criminals | Crime

    August 10, 2025

    TikTok to replace trust and safety team in Germany with AI and outsourced labor | Technology

    August 10, 2025

    Nvidia China H20 chips

    August 10, 2025
    Our Picks

    Reform council confirms ‘patriotic’ flag policy

    July 4, 2025

    Trump references bankers with antisemitic slur in Iowa speech to mark megabill’s passage – as it happened | Donald Trump

    July 4, 2025

    West Indies v Australia: Tourists bowled out for 286 in Grenada Test

    July 4, 2025

    Beards may be dirtier than toilets – but all men should grow one | Polly Hudson

    July 4, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Medium Rectangle Ad
    About Us

    Welcome to Core Bulletin — your go-to source for reliable news, breaking stories, and thoughtful analysis covering a wide range of topics from around the world. Our mission is to inform, engage, and inspire our readers with accurate reporting and fresh perspectives.

    Our Picks

    Mali detains two dozen soldiers over alleged coup plot against junta

    August 10, 2025

    More countries added to UK’s ‘deport first’ scheme for foreign criminals | Crime

    August 10, 2025
    Recent Posts
    • Mali detains two dozen soldiers over alleged coup plot against junta
    • More countries added to UK’s ‘deport first’ scheme for foreign criminals | Crime
    • TikTok to replace trust and safety team in Germany with AI and outsourced labor | Technology
    • Nvidia China H20 chips
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2025 Core Bulletin. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.