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GOP Pushes to Drill for Oil in Alaska Refuge
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, March 10, 2005
WASHINGTON - A Senate showdown over an Alaska wildlife refuge is expected within weeks as Republicans plan to use a budget measure to overcome strong opposition to allowing oil drilling in the protected area.

It will be the first big environmental issue facing the new Congress.

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  Republican leaders indicated Tuesday that they plan to press the issue of drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge as part of a so-called budget reconciliation process, which cannot be subject to a Democratic filibuster - a tactic that has blocked the refuge's development in the past.

Given the wider GOP majority in the Senate, Republicans said they think they have the best chance yet to open the presumably oil-rich but environmentally sensitive Alaska refuge to oil drilling, which has been one of President Bush's top energy priorities.

Budget Committee Chairman Judd Gregg, R-N.H., said it was reasonable to assume ANWR would be part of the budget measure.

Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the Energy Committee and a strong supporter of refuge oil development, said he was "very optimistic we're going to get the ANWR provision in this budget."

Gregg's panel was expected to begin work on the budget measure next week. Senate floor action - including a vote on the ANWR provision - was likely before the congressional Easter recess March 19.

Supporters of pumping the refuge's oil believe they have the 51 votes needed to get the measure through as part of the budget process. Opponents aren't ready to concede, and they remain certain that GOP leaders don't have the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster by opponents if ANWR drilling is in separate legislation.

A small group of senators and key administration officials is flying to Alaska's North Slope this weekend to try to dramatize their argument that the refuge can be developed in an environmentally sound way, using modern drilling technology. They will visit the refuge and North Slope oil drilling activities west of the protected area.

The group includes Interior Secretary Gale Norton, who has been there a number of times; the new energy secretary, Samuel Bodman, making his first trip; James Connaughton, head of the White House Council on Environmental Quality; and GOP Sens. Domenici, John Thune of South Dakota, Jim Bunning of Kentucky and Robert Bennett of Utah.

All are strong supporters of allowing companies to develop the millions of barrels of oil believed to lie beneath the tundra.

Environmentalists have been lobbying hard to keep oil rigs out of the refuge's coastal plain, a breeding ground for caribou, home to polar bears and musk oxen, and site of an annual influx of millions of migratory birds. They concede that this year they face the most difficult challenge in their efforts to protect the refuge.

© 2005 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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