Latest news with #AmblerAccessProject
Yahoo
29-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Red state official touts readiness to unleash energy across US: 'We have our own Greenland'
EXCLUSIVE: Alaska Department of Revenue Commissioner Adam Crum discussed President Trump's key role in unleashing energy independence in the state while speaking to Fox News Digital and explaining that Alaskan resources are ready to be used if the push to acquire Greenland is unsuccessful. Crum, speaking to Fox News Digital at the State Financial Officer Foundation conference in Orlando, Florida, explained that the "vast majority" of state government funds in Alaska come from developing natural resources, including mining and crude oil, and praised the Trump administration's moves to reverse course from the Biden administration when it comes to that development. "President Trump, you know our Governor Dunleavy has actually said he's probably one of the best presidents for Alaska," Crum said. "In his first term he did tremendous things for us and now in his second term, we were the only state that had an executive order directed at us and that was such a crucial thing, and it really improved our economic outlook within the state." On the first day of his presidency, Trump signed an executive order advancing the Ambler Access Project, a 211-mile industrial road through the Brooks Range foothills that enables commercial mining of copper, zinc and other materials in a remote Arctic area in Northwest Alaska. Alaska Senator Literally Shreds Biden's Energy Orders, Boosts Wh Efforts To Leverage Arctic Gas Pipeline Experts told Fox News Digital in February that the action, which reversed course from the Biden administration, will play a critical role in developing mineral resources in the state. Read On The Fox News App "We think that we are on the precipice in Alaska on an energy boom, when it comes to large-scale oil development, the natural gas line getting developed that the president really pushes very hard for, as well as all of these critical minerals that we need to get processed," Crum said. President Trump has vocally called for the United States to acquire Greenland for strategic purposes as well as due to its natural resources. Crum told Fox News Digital that Alaska is ready to step up when it comes to natural resources. Northern Highlights: Alaska's Energy, Security Policies Are The Guide Feds Need Amid Transition, Group Says "We do have our own Greenland. We have our Greenland that has a long history and track record of developing these resources in an area of the world that people would never have thought that it could be done responsibly," Crum said. "We've processed oil for over 60 years on the Arctic Ocean, and we have done so while at the same time building an 800-mile crude oil pipeline that actually has seen the caribou numbers increase over time with that pipeline being built. And so Alaskans are conservationists by nature." "We are hunters, we are fishermen, our indigenous population are subsistence, they gather, but we are the ones who use the land. We also want to be able to develop the land, so we make sure we do it the correct way," Crum continued. "In Alaska, we call it the Alaska standard. We don't need outside groups telling us that we have to do it responsibly. This is what we demand of companies as they come up there. Come up, be profitable, be clean. Profit Alaska, let Alaskan's have jobs and opportunities and also go enjoy the outdoors." Ultimately, Crum told Fox News Digital that Alaskan energy independence will not only be good for the United States, but it will also help push back against dependence on countries that have been hostile to the country, including China. "We also have antimony deposits, which is a rare thing because China is the vast producer and processor of antimony, which is needed for not only technology, but also like munitions and military, and so we've got very viable deposits within Alaska on these things," Crum article source: Red state official touts readiness to unleash energy across US: 'We have our own Greenland'


Fox News
29-04-2025
- Business
- Fox News
Red state official touts readiness to unleash energy across US: 'We have our own Greenland'
EXCLUSIVE: Alaska Department of Revenue Commissioner Adam Crum discussed President Trump's key role in unleashing energy independence in the state while speaking to Fox News Digital and explaining that Alaskan resources are ready to be used if the push to acquire Greenland is unsuccessful. Crum, speaking to Fox News Digital at the State Financial Officer Foundation conference in Orlando, Florida, explained that the "vast majority" of state government funds in Alaska come from developing natural resources, including mining and crude oil, and praised the Trump administration's moves to reverse course from the Biden administration when it comes to that development. "President Trump, you know our Governor Dunleavy has actually said he's probably one of the best presidents for Alaska," Crum said. "In his first term he did tremendous things for us and now in his second term, we were the only state that had an executive order directed at us and that was such a crucial thing, and it really improved our economic outlook within the state." On the first day of his presidency, Trump signed an executive order advancing the Ambler Access Project, a 211-mile industrial road through the Brooks Range foothills that enables commercial mining of copper, zinc and other materials in a remote Arctic area in Northwest Alaska. Experts told Fox News Digital in February that the action, which reversed course from the Biden administration, will play a critical role in developing mineral resources in the state. "We think that we are on the precipice in Alaska on an energy boom, when it comes to large-scale oil development, the natural gas line getting developed that the president really pushes very hard for, as well as all of these critical minerals that we need to get processed," Crum said. President Trump has vocally called for the United States to acquire Greenland for strategic purposes as well as due to its natural resources. Crum told Fox News Digital that Alaska is ready to step up when it comes to natural resources. "We do have our own Greenland. We have our Greenland that has a long history and track record of developing these resources in an area of the world that people would never have thought that it could be done responsibly," Crum said. "We've processed oil for over 60 years on the Arctic Ocean, and we have done so while at the same time building an 800-mile crude oil pipeline that actually has seen the caribou numbers increase over time with that pipeline being built. And so Alaskans are conservationists by nature." "We are hunters, we are fishermen, our indigenous population are subsistence, they gather, but we are the ones who use the land. We also want to be able to develop the land, so we make sure we do it the correct way," Crum continued. "In Alaska, we call it the Alaska standard. We don't need outside groups telling us that we have to do it responsibly. This is what we demand of companies as they come up there. Come up, be profitable, be clean. Profit Alaska, let Alaskan's have jobs and opportunities and also go enjoy the outdoors." Ultimately, Crum told Fox News Digital that Alaskan energy independence will not only be good for the United States, but it will also help push back against dependence on countries that have been hostile to the country, including China. "We also have antimony deposits, which is a rare thing because China is the vast producer and processor of antimony, which is needed for not only technology, but also like munitions and military, and so we've got very viable deposits within Alaska on these things," Crum explained.

Epoch Times
25-04-2025
- Business
- Epoch Times
Trump Signs Order to Surge Deep-Sea Mineral Mining
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on April 24 fast-tracking a new industry, offshore deep-sea mineral mining in the Pacific Ocean. Trump's The order also instructs the secretaries of commerce, interior, and energy to provide a report on private sector interest and opportunities in deep-seabed mining for mineral nodules and 'other seabed mineral resource[s],' while also developing a plan to map priority areas within the seabed to 'accelerate data collection.' Deep-sea mineral deposits can take various forms, including what are called 'polymetallic nodules,' or potato-sized mineral clumps with large concentrations of nickel, cobalt, manganese, and copper, which require millions of years to develop at several miles below sea level, according to a 2024 An area in the Pacific Ocean just southeast of Hawaii, known as the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, has an abundance of these nodules, the report noted, estimated to be 34 billion wet metric tons. The metals contained within are estimated to be worth roughly $10 trillion, according to the Berkeley report. China dominates the world supply chains for nearly all critical mineral sources, including the metals found in the deep-sea nodules, according to a 2022 Related Stories 4/23/2025 4/15/2025 In response to new tariffs, China has moved to block its exports of critical minerals to America. Trump's order, according to the White House, would increase American critical mineral production. It would also likely allow private companies to bypass the International Seabed Authority, the main United Nations-backed regulatory body that creates rules for seabed exploration. Currently, according to Berkeley, that body has issued exploration permits for the ocean floor for deep-sea mineral deposits, but as of last year, it had not yet issued active commercial deep-sea mining permits. Many companies have pushed for the International Seabed Authority to approve commercial mining in the deep sea. However, deep-sea mining does not come without a price, according to the Berkeley report. The mining operations could 'disturb the habitats of various organisms and disrupt non-food-chain-related interactions in the deep-sea ecosystems like how organisms find shelter,' the report noted, as the metal nodules provide 'vital substrate for organisms like sea sponges and corals.' Removing them could have significant environmental impacts on the organisms that rely on them for survival, according to the Berkeley report. Trump's order continues his administration's efforts to increase U.S. energy and mineral production and supply, with a previous order advancing the 'Ambler Access Project,' commercial mining along a 211-mile industrial road in remote Northwest Alaska that is rich in copper, zinc, and other materials, the White House said.
Yahoo
05-02-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Experts rally around Trump's under the radar executive order unlocking 'critical' project blocked by Biden
President Trump signed an executive order overlooked by some in the media on his first day of office that experts tell Fox News Digital will play a critical role in developing mineral resources in the United States. On the first day of his presidency, Trump signed an executive order advancing the Ambler Access Project, a 211-mile industrial road through the Brooks Range foothills that enables commercial mining for copper, zinc and other materials in a remote Arctic area in Northwest Alaska. That executive order, one of dozens signed by Trump in the early hours of his administration, reverses a move by former President Biden to block the project and represents a significant change in energy policy, according to experts who spoke to Fox News Digital. "President Biden issued 70 executive actions that discouraged tapping into Alaska's natural resources and public lands access," Gabriella Hoffman, Independent Women's Forum Center for Energy & Conservation Director, told Fox News Digital. "Unlike his predecessor, President Trump recognizes Alaska's potential to meet domestic energy and national security needs for reliable energy and critical minerals—including restoring the Ambler Access Project connecting to the Ambler Mining District." Experts Sound Alarm On Biden's Offshore Drilling Ban Having Reverse Effect On Environment: 'Disgraceful' "The Ambler Access Project has endured extensive environmental review and would bring economic development to rural communities in dire need of it without despoiling Alaska's natural beauty," Hoffman added. "Those who would benefit from employment by Ambler also hunt, fish, and enjoy public lands." Read On The Fox News App Research by the University of Alaska Center for Economic Development on the economic impact of the project concluded that the development of the Ambler Mining District could create thousands of direct, indirect, and induced jobs and the project could mean a projected $1 billion for the state in revenue, mining license tax revenue, corporate income taxes, and production royalties. "Ambler Road is the equivalent of a shoelace on a football field: a blip in the vast remoteness of Alaska's wilderness," Power The Future founder and Executive Director Daniel Turner told Fox News Digital. "Yet somehow bureaucrats in DC who do not live there and cannot find it on a map have the authority to prevent Alaskans from developing their own land and growing their economy. It's insanity." America's Energy Crisis Is Hiding In Plain Sight And It's Worse Than You Know Unlocking the project comes under the backdrop of China's emergence in the market for critical minerals as the country controls roughly 60% of the world's production of rare earth minerals and materials, prompting warnings from U.S. officials on the over-reliance on foreign suppliers. Turner explained that projects like Ambler Road being held up by the Biden administration have increased US dependency on China. "Critical projects in Alaska like Ambler Road and Pebble Mine and oil and gas exploration in ANWR which are held up by radical green ideologues have forced our dependency on China for these raw materials, compromised our national security, but also prevented our fellow Americans in Alaska from the prosperity and economic opportunities they deserve," Turner said. "So many raw materials we need are in Alaska, and Governor Dunleavy is hamstrung by green insanity in San Francisco and Washington, DC from developing them and growing his state's prosperity. The Trump Administration could be the most pro-Alaskan Presidency since Lincoln bought it." Hoffman told Fox News Digital that "critics" of the Ambler project "ignore" that "access to the Ambler Mining District is guaranteed by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA) of 1980." "My fellow Lower-48ers treat Alaska as a national preserve to be untouched and unexplored--dismissing locals and their perspectives," Hoffman said. "President Trump is actually listening to Alaskans and their needs." In a statement to Fox News Digital, Alaska GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan said he looks forward to "working with President Trump's administration and Alaskan leaders in the region to fully implement President Trump's Alaska-specific EO, which includes reversing Biden's denial of the Ambler road." "After enduring a four-year onslaught of 70 executive orders and actions by the Biden administration targeting my state, Alaskans have a new sense of hope and optimism for our future across a whole host of sectors and projects, including in our ability to develop our vast deposits of critical minerals and metals—many of which the United States is almost wholly dependent on China for," Sullivan said. Sullivan added that he worked "closely" with the first Trump administration to approve a road to the Ambler Mining District before the Biden administration "issued an order that killed that road last June, even though federal law mandates it." "Ironically, during Joe Biden's final overseas trip as president, he announced $600 million in aid to build a railroad in Angola to help that country produce and market its critical minerals. That's insane." Trump also signed an executive order which he said will "unleash American energy" by directing agencies to revise and rescind actions that impose undue burdens on domestic mining. "The Trump Administration is unwavering in its commitment to securing America's energy future, strengthening national defense, and fostering economic growth," White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly told Fox News Digital. "By unlocking one of the world's largest undeveloped mineral belts, President Trump is ensuring a domestic supply of critical minerals, reducing our reliance on foreign adversaries, and creating thousands of American jobs. This project is a win for national security and the American people."Original article source: Experts rally around Trump's under the radar executive order unlocking 'critical' project blocked by Biden


Fox News
05-02-2025
- Business
- Fox News
Experts rally around Trump's under the radar executive order unlocking 'critical' project blocked by Biden
President Trump signed an executive order overlooked by some in the media on his first day of office that experts tell Fox News Digital will play a critical role in developing mineral resources in the United States. On the first day of his presidency, Trump signed an executive order advancing the Ambler Access Project, a 211-mile industrial road through the Brooks Range foothills that enables commercial mining for copper, zinc and other materials in a remote Arctic area in Northwest Alaska. That executive order, one of dozens signed by Trump in the early hours of his administration, reverses a move by former President Biden to block the project and represents a significant change in energy policy, according to experts who spoke to Fox News Digital. "President Biden issued 70 executive actions that discouraged tapping into Alaska's natural resources and public lands access," Gabriella Hoffman, Independent Women's Forum Center for Energy & Conservation Director, told Fox News Digital. "Unlike his predecessor, President Trump recognizes Alaska's potential to meet domestic energy and national security needs for reliable energy and critical minerals—including restoring the Ambler Access Project connecting to the Ambler Mining District." "The Ambler Access Project has endured extensive environmental review and would bring economic development to rural communities in dire need of it without despoiling Alaska's natural beauty," Hoffman added. ""Those who would benefit from employment by Ambler also hunt, fish, and enjoy public lands." Research by the University of Alaska Center for Economic Development on the economic impact of the project concluded that the development of the Ambler Mining District could create thousands of direct, indirect, and induced jobs and the project could mean a projected $1 billion for the state in revenue, mining license tax revenue, corporate income taxes, and production royalties. "Ambler Road is the equivalent of a shoe lace on a football field: a blip in the vast remoteness of Alaska's wilderness," Power The Future founder and Executive Director Daniel Turner told Fox News Digital, "Yet somehow bureaucrats in DC who do not live there and cannot find it on a map have the authority to prevent Alaskans from developing their own land and growing their economy. It's insanity." Unlocking the project comes under the backdrop of China's emergence in the market for critical minerals as the country controls roughly 60% of the world's production of rare earth minerals and materials prompting warnings from U.S. officials on the over-reliance on foreign suppliers. Turner explained that projects like Ambler Road being held up by the Biden administration have increased US dependency on China. "Critical projects in Alaska like Ambler Road and Pebble Mine and oil and gas exploration in ANWR which are held up by radical green ideologues have forced our dependency on China for these raw materials, compromised our national security, but also prevented our fellow Americans in Alaska from the prosperity and economic opportunities they deserve," Turner said. "So many raw materials we need are in Alaska, and Governor Dunleavy is hamstrung by green insanity in San Francisco and Washington, DC from developing them and growing his state's prosperity. The Trump Administration could be the most pro-Alaskan Presidency since Lincoln bought it." Hoffman told Fox News Digital that "critics" of the Ambler project "ignore" is that "access to the Ambler Mining District is guaranteed by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA) of 1980." "My fellow Lower-48ers treat Alaska as a national preserve to be untouched and unexplored--dismissing locals and their perspectives," Hoffman said. "President Trump is actually listening to Alaskans and their needs." In a statement to Fox News Digital, Alaska GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan said he looks forward to "working with President Trump's administration and Alaskan leaders in the region to fully implement President Trump's Alaska-specific EO, which includes reversing Biden's denial of the Ambler road." "After enduring a four-year onslaught of 70 executive orders and actions by the Biden administration targeting my state, Alaskans have a new sense of hope and optimism for our future across a whole host of sectors and projects, including in our ability to develop our vast deposits of critical minerals and metals—many of which the United States is almost wholly dependent on China for," Sullivan said. Sullivan added that he worked "closely" with the first Trump administration to approve a road to the Ambler Mining District before the Biden administration "issued an order that killed that road last June, even though federal law mandates it." "Ironically, during Joe Biden's final overseas trip as president, he announced $600 million in aid to build a railroad in Angola to help that country produce and market its critical minerals. That's insane." Trump also signed an executive order which he said will "unleash American energy" by directing agencies to revise and rescind actions that impose undue burdens on domestic mining. "The Trump Administration is unwavering in its commitment to securing America's energy future, strengthening national defense, and fostering economic growth," White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly told Fox News Digital. "By unlocking one the world's largest undeveloped mineral belts, President Trump is ensuring a domestic supply of critical minerals, reducing our reliance on foreign adversaries, and creating thousands of American jobs. This project is a win for national security and the American people."