U.S. House panel passes reconciliation bill protecting Arctic reserve
from drilling
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[September 10, 2021]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The House Natural
Resources Committee late on Thursday passed legislation that will go
into a wider budget reconciliation package that includes restoring
protections for a pristine Arctic wildlife refuge from oil and gas
drilling.
The committee approved the measure 24-13 after Republicans weighed down
the process with about 100 amendments forcing Representative Raul
Grijalva, a Democrat and the chairman of the panel, to extend markup of
the bill into a second day after holding the first session last week.
Republicans urged Grijalva to postpone the panel's consideration of the
bill, saying Congress should first help people recover from Hurricane
Ida and concentrate on the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan.
Representative Garret Graves, a Louisiana Republican who joined the
panel remotely while dealing with the aftermath of Ida, said the bill
would harm offshore oil production.
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However, Grijalva said the bill is aimed at curbing climate change,
which can make storms like Ida stronger, and creating jobs in the energy
transition.
The bill protects Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) and
the Outer Continental Shelf from future oil and gas drilling. It also
invests $3 billion in a Civilian Climate Corps, $9.5 billion for Great
Lakes restoration and climate resiliency projects, and $2.5 billion to
clean up abandoned hardrock mines.
The legislation raises money by establishing a
hardrock mineral royalty, which Democrats said will raise about $2
billion over 10 years, increasing fossil fuel royalty rates and
extending royalty fees to methane emissions.
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The coastal plain within the 1002 Area of the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge is seen in this undated handout photo provided by
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Alaska Image Library. The Brooks
mountain range in the distance is not part of the 1002 area.
EDITORIAL USE ONLY REUTERS/HANDOUT/U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service/File Photo
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On Jan. 6 the administration of Donald Trump held the first lease
sale for ANWR, with only nine of 22 tracts sold and none bought by
major energy companies.
Environmentalists cheered the passage of the legislation.
"Developing this National Wildlife Refuge for oil and gas is simply
bad business with unacceptably high costs to people, wildlife and
the environment," said Nicole Whittington-Evans, director of
Defenders of Wildlife's Alaska Program.
Democrats in Congress are hoping to pass the $3.5 trillion
reconciliation spending measure this autumn but moderates in the
party, Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, have protested the
overall pricetag.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; editing by Richard Pullin)
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