at the core of the state’s challenge. It is important to emphasize that the state is not the appli - cant in this situation, yet the EPA has effectively said to the state that it cannot develop its lands as was first envisioned in the Alaska Statehood Act. This is a de facto taking and we should all be very concerned. It is worth noting that Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, who have expressed opposition to Peb - ble, have also expressed their op - position to the use of the preemp - tive veto against Pebble by the EPA for many of the reasons outlined in the state’s challenge. When we take Pebble out of this discussion, we see a federal agen- cy seeking to use authority it was not granted under the CWA. EPA has decided it can act as a zoning agency for state-owned lands. This further precludes the state’s ability to make decisions about lands it selected under the Alaska State- hood Act. From the perspective of the business and resource commu- nity, this issue is about whether
any project can get fair treatment in Alaska, because once an extraor- dinary precedent has been estab - lished, it becomes much easier for the bureaucracy and those who oppose development Alaska to use it again and again. — Kati Capozzi is president and CEO of the Alaska Chamber
PEBBLE, CONTINUED from PAGE 23
was even a mine plan. The EPA just made one up and then declared that their mine plan could not be permitted. This action was on again and off again based on political winds in Washington, D.C. The veto was fi - nalized under a Biden administra - tion, which is reluctant to permit any major mines despite the crit - icality of mining, including Peb- ble’s copper, to its climate-change focused renewable energy goals. In addition to stopping Pebble, this EPA action interferes with the state’s ability to manage its lands — an action that violates the deal Alaska made when it entered the union and was granted access to land selections for the purpose of establishing an economy for the state. It also violates the “no more” clause of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, which put tens of millions of acres of Alaska’s lands into parks and wilderness areas. These issues are
— Tessa Axelson is executive director of the Alaska Forest Association
— Karen Matthias is executive director of Alaska Metal Mines — Deantha Skibinski is executive di- rector of the Alaska Miners Association — Rebecca Logan is president and CEO of the Alaska Support Industry Alliance — Alicia Amberg is executive director of Associated General Contractors of Alaska — Leila Kimbrell is executive director of the Resource Development Council for Alaska
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The Alaska Miner
Fall 2023
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