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Congressional Research Service
Informing the legislative debate since 1914


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                                                                                     Updated December 2, 2024

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: Status of Oil and Gas Program


The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR or the
Refuge) comprises 19 million acres in northeast Alaska,
administered primarily by the Fish and Wildlife Service
(FWS)  in the Department of the Interior (DOI). ANWR's
Coastal Plain-a 1.57-million-acre area in the northern part
of the Refuge (Figure 1)-is viewed as an onshore oil
prospect, with a mean estimate by the U.S. Geological
Survey of 7.7 billion barrels of technically recoverable oil
on federal lands (or 10.4 billion barrels if Alaska Native
lands and adjacent waters are included). The Refuge also is
a center of activity for caribou and other wildlife, with
subsistence use by Alaska Natives and critical habitat for
polar bears under the Endangered Species Act (ESA; 16
U.S.C. §§1531-1544).

P.L. 115-97 established a program for oil and gas leasing in
ANWR's   Coastal Plain. The law's 2017 enactment marked
a turning point in decades of congressional debate over
energy development in the Refuge. Prior to enactment of
the law, Section 1003 of the Alaska National Interest Lands
Conservation Act of 1980 (ANILCA; P.L. 96-487) had
prohibited oil and gas development in ANWR unless such
activities were explicitly authorized by an act of Congress.
Section 20001 of P.L. 115-97 directed the Secretary of the
Interior, acting through the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM), to establish and administer a competitive oil and
gas leasing program for ANWR's Coastal Plain and added
this program as a stated purpose of the Refuge. The law
requires at least two lease sales in the Coastal Plain, one


within four years of the law's enactment (i.e., by December
2021) and a second within seven years of enactment
(December 2024). Each lease sale must offer at least
400,000 acres and must include those areas with the highest
potential for discovery of hydrocarbons. The law also has
provisions concerning management of the oil and gas
program, minimum  royalty rates for ANWR leases,
disposition of revenues from the program, rights-of-way,
and surface development. (For more information, see CRS
In Focus IF10782, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR)
Oil and Gas Program: Provisions in P.L. 115-97, Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act.)

During BLM's  implementation of the ANWR oil and gas
program, Congress has continued to debate leasing in the
Refuge. Some Members  support the program established in
P.L. 115-97 and others seek to repeal it.

January 202 Lease Sale
On January 6, 2021, under the Trump Administration, BLM
held the first oil and gas lease sale for the ANWR Coastal
Plain, offering 22 tracts on 1.1 million acres. The sale
yielded a total of $14.4 million in high bids on 11 tracts.
BLM  subsequently issued leases for nine of the tracts,
covering 437,804 total acres. Seven leases went to the
Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority
(AIDEA),  a state-established public corporation. Two
private companies that won leases later relinquished them.

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