The Trump administration has formally scrapped a trio of policy documents that imposed new limitations on oil and gas development in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve (NPR-A), the DOI said on Monday, clearing the decks for a new wave of drilling across the 23-million-acre expanse. This marks the latest salvo in Trump’s aggressive energy dominance strategy—and a direct reversal of Biden-era efforts to wall off roughly 10.6 million acres from future leasing.
At the heart of the move is a power shift: taking discretion out of the hands of regulators and environmental planners, and putting it back into the hands of industry. The Department of the Interior says the rescinded policies—two issued in January and one in July 2024—lacked statutory grounding, ignored local voices, and undermined the core purpose of the NPR-A, which Congress designated as a strategic domestic energy reserve nearly a century ago.
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum called the Biden administration’s approach “obstruction over production,” adding that the new action aligns BLM’s policies with the reserve’s original mission. The rescission also fulfills Executive Order 14153 and Secretary’s Order 3422—two cornerstones of Trump’s “Unleashing Alaska’s Extraordinary Resource Potential” initiative.
The policy reset has immediate implications for oil majors like ConocoPhillips, which is pushing forward on its 600-million-barrel Willow project, expected to come online in 2029. It also signals to other operators—Santos Ltd., Repsol, Armstrong Oil & Gas—that Alaska is once again open for business.
Trump’s team is laying the groundwork for a broader resource play. One that doesn’t just boost oil production in the Arctic, but potentially doubles the throughput of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline and lays the foundation for a long-sought Alaska LNG export project. The administration’s recent visits to Prudhoe Bay with Asian trade officials hint at a much bigger ambition: securing foreign investment for new infrastructure that would finally monetize Alaska’s stranded gas.
Environmentalists are already sounding alarms over the rollback. But the White House sees opportunity—in barrels, Btu’s, and billions in long-delayed projects. And this time, they’re not waiting for consensus.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
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