Tuesday, August 19, 2025
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North Slope renaissance ahead

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CONOCOPHILLIPS EXECUTIVE DESCRIBES PROGRESS SPARKED BY SB 21

In an upbeat report to a legislative committee this week, ConocoPhillips says its production in Alaska may grow by as much as 100,000 barrels per day in the near future.

Much of that increase is due to a more competitive tax structure known as SB 21, the More Alaska Production Act, passed in 2013.

The predicted increased will add to the 500,000 to 530,000 barrels a day flowing through the Trans Alaska Pipeline System.

Scott Jepsen, Vice President for External Affairs for ConocoPhillips, told a joint House and Senate Natural Resources Committee on Monday that new developments, technology, and exploration successes across the North Slope are leading to significant new production, revenues, and future job growth.

He added that keeping the current tax structure stable is critical to keeping Alaska competitive with the Lower 48.

Jepsen shared a slide showing what the company’s outlook was in 2013, with a downward trajectory.

“Basically we had an uncompetitive tax structure and a high cost of supply and we were investing our monies elsewhere. We had a big focus on the Lower 48 unconventionals and our production profile here in Alaska was a 6- to 8-percent decline profile,” he told the committee.

To drive the point home, Jepsen then showed the committee what the outlook is today, compared to the bleak outlook of 2013. It is decidedly more optimistic:

Jepsen suggested there will now be higher production in 10 years from the company’s efforts on the North Slope and the National Petroleum Reserve Alaska; Alaska will see 200,000 more barrels a day of oil flowing through the pipeline than the company had estimated prior to 2013.

What changed? What happened?

“Well, one of the things that changed is we ended up with a different tax structure in SB 21, which has helped basically keep Alaska in the game. It’s a more competitive fiscal tax structure,” he said.

Gov. Sean Parnell championed SB 21 and it passed in 2013, but Democrats in the House and Senate opposed the flattening of the tax structure, and a group of tax promoters who wanted the previous structure back took it to the voters in a referendum in 2014.

But voters decided to give SB 21 a chance. Even so, it was an issue that divided Alaskans — should oil be taxed higher as it reaches higher prices, or should the tax flatten out as the price of oil increases? Gov. Bill Walker was among those who opposed SB 21, wanting a progressive tax structure that the old ACES structure offered. But he also promised he would honor the choice voters had made on the SB 21 ballot referendum.

The House Democrats that control the majority have wanted to double the effective tax rate at the current price, and wanted to triple it if prices reached $70 a barrel, which is where prices have been since November. The House Natural Resources Committee is co-chaired by two of those tax promoters — Andy Josephson and Geran Tarr.

Jepsen told the committee that technological improvements and cost reductions are also making Alaska more competitive with other company projects around the country.

In Alaska this year, the company had drilled the longest lateral stretch on land that has ever been drilled in North America — 21,000 feet — a result of improved technology.

“That’s a huge game-changer,” Jepsen said. The company recently contracted with Doyon to drill an extended reach well with a bigger drilling machine that will allow lateral drilling to 37,000 feet. The company can explore 154 square miles from a 14-acre drill site.

For comparison, in early Prudhoe Bay exploration in the 1970s, the drilling pads were 65 acres and the drilling reach was three square miles.

As for projects happening right now, Jepsen said Greater Mooses Tooth 1 will have first oil in the final months of this year and produce around 30,000 barrels a day during peak production. Greater Mooses Tooth 2’s production will be higher than originally estimated, at more than 30,000 barrels a day, but will be more expensive to build out due to the increased number of wells planned.

During the two winter construction seasons, GMT 1 provided 700 construction jobs, and GMT 2 is expected to be the same.

 

The Fiord West site will be drilled from CD2, with extended reach drilling, and first oil is planned for August, 2020.

For the Bear Tooth Unit, where the Willow discovery is, there will be thousands of construction jobs, and the development will be similar in scope to the Alpine field, where ConocoPhillips has a stake.

In the Putu 2, Putu 2A,  and Stony Hill areas, the company has found 100-350 million barrels of resource.

With the Willow discovery, with an estimated 400-470 million barrels of oil, a final investment decision won’t be ready until 2021.

ConocoPhillips is Alaska’s largest crude oil producer and one of the largest holders of state, federal and fee exploration leases in Alaska, with approximately one million undeveloped acres.

911: We cannot earn or pay back such a sacrifice

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By REP. CHUCK KOPP
GUEST COLUMNIST

Seventeen years ago today, I awoke at 5:20 am to a phone call. I was a police officer at the time and was expecting it to be police dispatch directing me to respond to an incident.

It was not.

I will never forget the fear in my cousin’s voice as he said just four words: “Turn on the TV”. I did.

The World Trade Center towers were ablaze. All the major networks were solely focused on coverage of what we would soon learn was a coordinated terrorist suicide attack on our homeland.

Rep. Chuck Kopp

American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175 had already crashed into the North and South towers of the World Trade Center.

At 5:37 am Alaska time, American Airlines Flight 77 slammed into the Pentagon. About 22 minutes later, the World Trade Center South Tower collapsed, followed shortly by the North Tower.

Reports started coming in of another plane crash in Pennsylvania and we soon learned that United Airlines Flight 93 had crashed in Somerset County, Pennsylvania killing all onboard.

For so many of us, everything in life stopped that day. Every priority changed. Our families, our community, our state, and our country was overwhelmed. The death and devastation were incomprehensible. Our future uncertain.

In the days that followed we learned about our enemies…and most importantly, our heroes:

  • The brave passengers and crew of Flight 93 who fought valiantly to retake control of the aircraft. The plane crashed, but it never reached its intended target of destruction.
  • The hundreds of firefighters, and scores of other police and emergency responders and volunteers who gave their lives successfully evacuating thousands of people from the World Trade Center structures prior to their collapse.
  • There were so many more heroes on that day. They never quit till their last breath. That’s honor.

The days that followed saw our whole country come together, maybe as never before. We needed each other. We were suffering and grieving a great loss, and we saw life as it is — fragile and brief. Political animosity was nearly absent and we enjoyed a brief season of true community when we were gentle with our words, kind in our conduct, and gracious in our attitudes.

So to the moms who said their last “I love you” to their little boy, to the dads who gave their precious daughter one final hug, to the many good people who took that last phone call from a loved one trapped in a hijacked plane or in a World Trade Center tower, to the flight crews and passengers who fought to the death to thwart an unimaginable evil, and to all the firefighters and police officers who had their lives tragically cut short that morning…

You absorbed a terrible blow for all of us. We could never earn or pay back such a sacrifice. Today we remember you. We honor you. We thank you. May your memory, service and sacrifice be forever blessed.

And to all the men and women of our Armed Forces, and their families who have sacrificed so much to protect us from further harm…words fail. You have always been faithful to us, may we be faithful to you. We’ll just have to live out our thanks.

Chuck Kopp is the representative for House District 24 and is a retired police officer.

Three shootings, one robbery, an absconder: Monday in Anchorage

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The FBI is looking for this man, believed to be the robber of a credit union on Monday in Anchorage.

BUSY AFTERNOON FOR CRIMINALS

On Monday, three people were taken to the hospital after shootings, and a man is wanted for robbery of a credit union — all within the course of three hours in Fairview and Mountain View neighborhoods.

The robbery took place at the Alaska USA Federal Credit Union on Juneau Street just after 3:15 p.m. This case is being handled by the FBI, which released the above security camera photo of the suspect, who did not appear to use a weapon during the robbery.

By 4:20 pm, police receive a report of a shooting in the parking lot of the Black Angus Inn at 1430 Gambell Street. A man had pulled up in a vehicle, and another man approached the vehicle. The two began arguing, and the driver got out of the vehicle and shot the other man. The shooter drove off in a 1998 maroon Ford Expedition with Alaska license JFD440, and the victim was transported to the hospital with a gunshot wound in his lower body; his condition is unknown.

This 1998 maroon Ford Expedition with Alaska license JFD440 is the vehicle the suspect in the Black Angus Inn shooting was driving.

Then, at 6:57 p.m. there were reports of a shooting in Mountain View. Two adults were taken to the hospital with gunshot wounds after someone began shooting from a vehicle at the intersection of Thompson and Bliss Streets. The two are in critical condition, at last report.

An update from police today says that the suspect and one of the victims met in the 500-block of North Pine Street. The two got into an altercation and the suspect shot the victim multiple times in the upper body.

The second victim, in the area at the same time, was also shot multiple times in the upper body. Both victims were transported to local hospitals with life threatening injuries. Detectives believe this is drug-related and not a random crime. But they’re not sure why the second victim was in the area at the time.

Meanwhile, police released a photograph and information about a 30-year-old man named Manueal Robles (APD Case 18-36436), who is the subject of several warrants:

• Felony Fail to Appear on the original charges of Assault I and two counts of Assault IV
• Felony Fail to Appear on the original charges of Assault II and two counts of Reckless Endangerment
• Misdemeanor Violations of Conditions of Release
• Misdemeanor Violations of Conditions of Release
• Felony Assault II and Assault IV

Robles’ most recent felony warrant for Assault II and IV is for harming the same victim from prior cases. He was out on $1,000 bail and failed to appear in court on Monday.

Robles is 5’06” tall, weighs 170 pounds, and has black hair and brown eyes. His head is tattooed, as shown in the photos here.

If you have information regarding Robles’ whereabouts, call non-emergency Police Dispatch at 3-1-1 (option #1). Or, to remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 561-STOP or online at www.anchoragecrimestoppers.com.

WEDNESDAY UPDATE

A shooting at the intersection of 19th Avenue and C Street sent a man to the hospital after 1 am Wednesday. The man was found by passersby.

“The preliminary investigation found that the suspect and the victim got into an altercation after meeting up in the area. The suspect shot the victim and fled the scene,” the report stated. The victim and suspect are believed to have known each other.

Patriot Day, a National Day of Service and Remembrance

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Flags are lowered today in honor of the nearly 3,000 people who were killed on Sept. 11, 2001 in four coordinated terrorist attacks. In Alaska, today is known as Patriot Day.

“The tragic events of September 11, 2001 are seared into our collective memory,” Gov. Bill Walker said in a statement. “I hope Alaskans will join me tomorrow in observing a moment of silence to reflect on the souls taken from us that day, and the first responders who put themselves in danger to run to the aid of others. September 11 is a time for us to renew our commitment to our American values of freedom, service, and courage.”

In April, the Alaska State Legislature passed Sen. Kevin Meyer’s SB 152, establishing Sept. 11 each year as Patriot Day. This was after Gov. Walker had mishandled his 2017 proclamation, which fashioned the day into a day of “tolerance, patriotism, diversity, and respect for others,” which offended many who see it as a day for respect for the victims and honor for the patriots and heroes.

Walker will sign SB 152 into law at Anchorage Fire Department Station #1 at 100 East 4th Avenue at 4 p.m. Tuesday.

HISTORY OF PATRIOT DAY

President Bush designated Sept. 11 as Patriot Day, on Dec. 18, 2001. In 2009, Congress, with a Democrat-controlled House of Representatives, designated Sept. 11 as a National Day of Service and Remembrance as part of the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act. President Barack Obama amended President Bush’s presidential proclamation and formally recognized and established Sept. 11 as a National Day of Service and Remembrance.

President Donald Trump has returned to calling it Patriot Day since he took office.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski offered this statement today, using the congressional designation of the National Day of Service and Remembrance:

“Across our nation, we pause on this day to remember the tragedies of September 11, 2001 — the anniversary of the attacks at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and the heroic story of Flight 93. That day we saw a total of 2,996 people dead, including firefighters, paramedics, and police officers trying to help. 9/11 will forever be one of the most tragic days in our nation’s history.

“Yet from that tragedy, emerged a renewed sense of unity, patriotism, and reminder that we are all Americans together.

“On this day, officially known as the National Day of Service and Remembrance, we honor those we lost and the heroic acts of so many. We remember the courage, heroism, and bravery shown by everyday Americans and first responders. And we promote community service as a tribute to the 9/11 victims and also the survivors.

“So let us continue to honor and thank all of those who sacrificed so much — the victims and heroes of 9/11 — by coming together as neighbors, as volunteers, to embody that “spirit of service” and community on this national day of unity. Let us not just remember that sense of unity our nation had after 9/11, let us live it.”

President Donald Trump’s statement reaffirmed today as “Patriot Day:”

“On Patriot Day, we honor the memories of the nearly 3,000 precious lives we lost on September 11, 2001, and of every hero who has given their life since that day to protect our safety and our freedom. We come together, today, to recall this timeless truth: When America is united, no force on Earth can break us apart. Our values endure; our people thrive; our Nation prevails; and the memory of our loved ones never fades.

“Although that fateful Tuesday 17 years ago began like any other, it erupted into horror and anguish when radical Islamist terrorists carried out an unprecedented attack on our homeland. In New York, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, the enemies of liberty took aim on America, but their evil acts could not crush our spirit, overcome our will, or loosen our commitment to freedom. Through the dust and ashes, we emerged resilient and united — bruised but not broken.

“On September 11, 2001, the world came to understand the true source of America’s strength: A people of an indomitable will and a society rooted in the timeless values of liberty. Our love of country was made manifest through the examples of Americans engaging in countless acts of courage, grit, and selflessness. Their actions gave us hope and helped to sustain us in the days of healing that followed. We were moved by the heroism of the passengers and crew aboard United Flight 93, who sacrificed their lives to prevent further acts of terror. We were inspired by police and first responders as they rushed headlong into burning buildings to rescue the injured and trapped, and as they courageously braved fire, smoke, and debris, descending deep into piles of rubble, ash, and twisted iron to search for survivors. We were stirred to service by the deeds of those who labored in the ensuing days and months, often in dangerous conditions, to help our Nation rebuild and recover. The noble sacrifices of these true patriots are forged into the great history of America.

“Today, we honor the memories of the souls we lost on September 11, 2001, and pay tribute to all of the patriots who have sacrificed their lives in defense of freedom. We pray for the Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines, and Coast Guardsmen currently serving our Nation in harm’s way. We thank the dedicated men and women who keep our homeland safe and secure. We applaud the unsung patriots in city halls, community centers, and places of worship across our country whose simple acts of kindness define the greatness of America.
By a joint resolution approved December 18, 2001 (Public Law 107-89), the Congress has designated September 11 of each year as “Patriot Day.”

“NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim September 11, 2018, as Patriot Day. I call upon all departments, agencies, and instrumentalities of the United States to display the flag of the United States at half staff on Patriot Day in honor of the individuals who lost their lives on September 11, 2001. I invite the Governors of the United States and its Territories and interested organizations and individuals to join in this observance. I call upon the people of the United States to participate in community service in honor of those our Nation lost, to observe this day with appropriate ceremonies and activities, including remembrance services, and to observe a moment of silence beginning at 8:46 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time to honor the innocent victims who perished as a result of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

“IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this tenth day of September, in the year of our Lord two thousand eighteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-third.

Breaking: Sullivan chairs subcommittee on military readiness

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Sen. Dan Sullivan has been named chairman of the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness.

He was appointed by the new chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma.

Both vacancies come after the passing of the late Sen. John McCain, who had chaired the full Senate Armed Services Committee since 2015. Inofe had been the chair of the Readiness Subcommittee.

Sullivan serves on Armed Services; Commerce, Science and Transportation; Environment and Public Works; and Veterans’ Affairs committees.

“The passing of Senator John McCain leaves extremely large shoes to fill, not only in the United States Senate but when it comes to the broader issues of national security, foreign policy, international diplomacy and freedom,” said Sen. Sullivan. “While John’s leadership can’t be replaced, I’m honored to do my part on the Senate Armed Services Committee to continue his legacy of service on behalf of our nation’s men and women in uniform.”

Sullivan will oversee military readiness across each branch within the Department of Defense, including these portfolios:

  • Responsibilities: Military readiness including training, logistics, and maintenance; military construction; housing construction and privatization; contracting and acquisition policy; business and financial management; base realignment and closure; and defense energy and environmental programs.
  • Special additional areas: Conventional ammunition procurement; Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation of infrastructure; National Defense Stockpile; defense industrial and technology base policies; facility and housing maintenance and repair; land and property management; information technology management policy (excluding cyber); and industrial operations, including depots, shipyards, arsenals, and ammunition plants.
  • Oversight of budget accounts: Operation and maintenance; Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation of support programs; conventional ammunition procurement; military construction and family housing; base realignment and closure; working capital funds; the National Defense Stockpile Transaction Fund.
  • Oversight of DoD offices: Undersecretary of Defense (Acquisition and Sustainment); Department of Defense Chief Management Officer; and the Chief Management Officers of the military departments.
  • Oversight of DOD agencies and commands: U.S. Transportation Command; Defense Logistics Agency; Defense Finance and Accounting Service; Defense Investigative Service; Defense Contract Audit Agency; DOD Inspector General.

“As Alaskans know, our state is at the forefront of military readiness and training – home to expansive training ranges, large-scale exercises like REDFLAG-Alaska and Northern Edge, and the best trained soldiers and airmen in the world,” Sullivan said.

“I recently highlighted these areas with Secretary Mattis and our Service Secretaries so they could better understand the value of our geostrategic location and the vital role Alaska serves in the Indo-Pacific. As the chairman of the Subcommittee on Readiness, I will continue to press these issues and others to take appropriate steps to ensure our troops have the resources, equipment, and training they need to protect our nation against an increasingly complex and diverse array of threats.”

Win for free speech: Judge puts restraining order on State over sign removal

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Alaska Superior Court Judge Herman Walker today ruled in favor of the plaintiff, which in this case is all political candidates in Alaska.
Judge Walker ruled that the State must stop harassing candidates who have campaign signs on private property. The Court granted more relief than the Walker Administration was willing to concede  by ordering that the Department of Transportation stop discriminating against political speech and stop threatening fines and prosecution.
“The State of Alaska and [DOT] are ordered to treat unauthorized commercial signs and political campaign signs equally,” Judge Walker ruled.  “In particular, the State of Alaska and the Department shall cease threatening the public with fines or fees for displaying small, temporary, campaign signs on private property outside the state’s right-of-ways.”
The case was brought by a group supporting the candidacy of Mike Dunleavy for governor, and was joined by the American Civil Liberties Union.
Although it is a partial ruling, it appears the judge recognizes that the State was targeting the political speech of the governor’s opponents with threats of fines and prosecution. The ruling applies to signs on private property, but the judge still needs to rule on signs that are on private property along highways where the state has rights of way.
The trouble started in July, when Gov. Walker’s campaign purchased nearly all the public bus “wraps” available in Anchorage, and then took down the Walker signs from rights-of-way. Immediately. the State Department of Transportation issued a warning that it would flag and remove signs that were in violation of a state law that has never before been enforced.
Dunleavy for Alaska was clearly “winning” the sign war by mid-summer, and had invested heavily in attractive graphics that have become iconic signs for the group, which has had a hard time keeping up with request for them. The signs are so popular that they have become collectors’ items.
Dunleavy for Alaska asked the ACLU to sue the state.
Last week, the judge indicated he would rule quickly on at least some of the complaint. He did so today. The judge’s partial ruling can be found at this link:
In addition to a restraining order on the State, the judge ordered the Department of Transportation to inform all candidates of the ruling, update the Alaska DOT website with information reflecting the order, and issue a press release that explains the updated guidance for political signs within and outside of the State’s rights-of-way.
A separate order that deals with political signs in the State rights-of-way will be issued later, he said.

Getting to the bottom of shady voting in District 15

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By ANDREW JENSEN
ALASKA JOURNAL OF COMMERCE

Among the many subjects that regularly earn Republicans a mocking from Democrats and their media sympathizers, perhaps none rank as highly as claims about election fraud.

Attempts to secure the voting franchise through requirements for ID are universally decried as racist and based on bogeyman conspiracy theories about the dead or otherwise ineligible casting ballots.

In House District 15, where Rep. Gabrielle LeDoux now holds an insurmountable lead of 113 votes over her inert challenger Aaron Weaver, a case is now emerging that voter fraud indeed took place.

Seven dead people requested absentee ballots from beyond the grave. At least two others confirmed ballots returned in their names were not cast by them. A total of 26 absentee ballots — all cast for LeDoux — are now under investigation by the Division of Elections and the Criminal Division of the Department of Law.

Fewer than 600 ballots were cast on Aug. 21 during the GOP primary election, with Weaver waking up to a three-vote edge, 294-291, after he went to bed without even bothering to follow the results as they began posting around 9:15 p.m.

LeDoux crushed Weaver in the absentee count conducted Aug. 28 and now leads 452-339, but a strong whiff of corruption hovers over her apparent victory thanks to what appears to be a systematic effort to game the system.

At the center of it is LeDoux’s Hmong outreach contractor Charlie Chang of Fresno, Calif., who she’s enlisted in each of her House District 15 competitions and was paid nearly $12,000 in July for get-out-the-vote efforts in the Muldoon neighborhood of Anchorage.

[Continue reading at the Alaska Journal of Commerce]

Breaking: Exxon seals deal with governor on gas

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ExxonMobil has committed its gas to the Alaska Gasline.

Gov. Bill Walker has gotten his old foe Exxon to agree to a binding deal with Alaska Gasline Development Corporation, the details of which will be announced today.

Gov. Walker spent his entire legal career suing Exxon and other oil companies and his antipathy toward Exxon is widely known. To have an announcement of this sort so close to the General Election may be seen by some as pure election politics, although as a company Exxon is famously difficult to coerce.

The agreement includes both price and quantity of gas from Prudhoe Bay and Pt. Thomson.

In addition, the Department of Natural Resources has agreed to amend the Pt. Thomson Settlement Agreement, which will include putting a pause on deadlines for the state’s largest undeveloped oil and gas field to align its development plan with the gasline. Deadline relief under the Pt. Thompson agreement may be what motivated Exxon to devote the internal staff resources to negotiate a gas sale agreement for a project with questionable economic prospects.

At the same time Exxon is getting on board, the Chinese entities that had courted the project have recently distanced themselves.

Sinopec announced this summer that it will not be involved in construction of the project, contrary to the memorandum of understanding it signed last November. Sinopec’s given reason for its recent change of heart was lack of technical expertise.

Accordingly, AGDC has started to search for a major construction and engineering company that can manage construction of an 800-mile gasline and large liquefaction and gasification facilities.

A critical stumbling block for the project remains: Marketing massive quantities of gas at currently uncompetitive prices.

China’s penchant for industrial espionage is another factor lurking in the background.

The governor’s announcement comes 58 days before an election, and voters can expect a series of these “developments” from the Governor’s Office over the next 58 days.

The governor’s press release is linked here:

FINAL Press Release AGDC Gas Sale Negotiations.docx

Skeptics will want to look at the fine print to see who is holding the best cards — Exxon, China or the governor.

Former Gov. Sean Parnell reflected that this is now a good opportunity for Alaska to unburden itself of potential Chinese investment and instead focus on getting gas to Alaskans, leaving some available for export.

He said it’s time to pivot to the ASAP line by getting private sector investors interested in building an LNG facility at tidewater.

Others credited Parnell, saying that without the settlement agreement that he and his team won, there would be no announcement today, and if Walker had prevailed in his litigation over the Point Thomson settlement, the state would still be in court with the company today, and there would be no facilities at Point Thomson — and no gas to sell.

The announcement was to be made by press release today, with no formal press conference scheduled.

Environmentalists’ bizarre attraction to coal and oil wearables

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MINING THE IRONY OF PROTESTS IN JUNEAU, THE TOWN THAT OIL KEEPS ALIVE

In Juneau and elsewhere on Saturday, groups called Rise Up and 350.org staged protests about climate change, the wrongs of oil, and the rights of renewables. They hoisted signs that promoted keeping bad oil in the ground and using good renewables.

But the irony was everywhere. In Juneau, every protestor was wearing coal and oil, and most, if not all, were carrying electronic devices with metals mined in third-worth countries — possibly by children.

Poly-pro fabrics keep people warm in a cool climate like Juneau, and have been all the rage for decades. Even old-time Juneauites wouldn’t give up their puffy Patagonia jackets and return to wool long johns and smelly halibut jackets of yore. Not for all the coal in China.

Soy-based ink? Protesters in Juneau don’t even want a gasline. This can’t be good for Gov. Bill Walker. A gasline is his signature project.

The Juneau climate change protesters were addressed by former President Barack Obama climate change adviser Don Wuebbels, who was the lead author on the National Climate Change Assessment Reports.

Wuebbels is the Harry E. Preble Professor of Atmospheric Science at the University of Illinois, which presumably means he likely flew to Juneau to stand on the steps of the Alaska Capitol for 15 minutes and address the 100 people gathered as part of the Rise for Climate rally.

He also spoke at the University of Alaska Southeast that evening at the invitation of his former Obama White House colleague Beth Kerttula. There’s no word on the carbon footprint of his visit.

As part of the event, the protesters stood for a photo in front of an artificial whale that is breaching from an artificial pond on an artificial island next that was built next to the Douglas Bridge.

The whale is made up of 13,000 pounds of bronze. That’s more than twice the weight of two large trucks or SUVs.

Front and center in the climate change protest is Juneau mayoral candidate Saralyn Tabachnick, with 100 of her waterproofed coal-and-oil wearing fellow Juneauites. Photo from 

Bronze is made up of copper and tin alloys; 50 percent of the world’s tin comes from China mines, and 40 percent of the world’s copper comes from Chile and China.

China and developing nations that produce these metals have, unlike mines in the United States, wretched records for environmental protections.

To learn more about how polyester is made, click here.

To read about tin mining and human exploitation in Indonesia, click here.

There’s not enough irony to go around here, but this author is expecting that next year, protesters all show up in wool and leather, just to keep the narrative “on point.”