Environmental policy in Alaska

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Environmental policy in Alaska
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Endangered species in Alaska


Environmental policy aims to conserve natural resources by balancing environmental protection with economic growth, property rights, public health, and energy production. Federal, state, and local government entities develop and implement environmental policies through laws and regulations. This page features information about environmental policy in Alaska.

Environmental governance in Alaska

Agencies and organizations

  • The Alaska legislature has two standing committees in both the House and Senate on Resources. Both committees manage bills and hold hearings on issues related to programs and activities at the Alaska Departments of Natural Resources, Fish and Game and Environmental Conservation.
  • The Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation is responsible for enforcing environmental policy in Alaska. It runs various programs in the areas of air and water quality, spill prevention and response, drinking water quality and waste management.[1]
  • The Alaska Department of Natural Resources manages the state's publicly-owned land, water and other resources excepting fish and game. The department is composed of divisions for the management of agriculture, forestry, mining, oil and gas, and the state's parks and recreation areas.[2]


Environmental budget

See also: Environmental spending in the 50 states

The table below features annual budget information for the Alaska Environmental Conservation Department from 2011 to 2023:

Environmental and natural resources budget in Alaska, 2011-2023
Fiscal year Total spending
2023 $108,502,700
2022 $83,528,800
2021 $72,576,400
2020 $78,136,900
2019 $81,285,000
2018 $73,088,200
2017 $83,419,200
2016 $85,353,600
2015 $87,330,800
2014 $87,225,600
2013 $83,600,200
2012 $79,788,101
2011 $77,521,600
Source: Alaska Office of Management and Budget

Air

Clean Air Act

See also: Implementation of the Clean Air Act

The Clean Air Act is a federal law aimed at maintaining air quality and reducing air pollution. The law requires states and private industries to meet national air pollution standards. Each state must implement an EPA-approved plan to reduce air pollutants from industrial facilities such as chemical plants and utilities. Over 47,000 facilities nationwide were regulated under the Clean Air Act as of February 2023.[3][4][5][6]

The table below features information about the number of regulated facilities under the Clean Air Act in Alaska from 2014 to 2023:

Regulated facilities under the Clean Air Act in Alaska, 2014-2023
Year Number of EPA-regulated facilities Number of state-regulated facilities Number of local-regulated facilities Total regulated facilities
2023 413 8 0 421
2022 428 9 0 437
2021 430 11 0 441
2020 440 10 0 450
2019 449 8 0 457
2018 445 13 0 458
2017 438 9 0 447
2016 429 10 0 439
2015 422 11 0 433
2014 427 11 0 438
Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "EPA/State Air Dashboard"

Mercury and air toxics standards

See also: Mercury and air toxics standards

Citing its authority under the Clean Air Act, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 2011 issued a rule (commonly known as the MATS rule) limiting the amount of mercury and other toxic air pollutants emitted by power plants. Mercury and air toxics standards (MATS) target mercury and other hazardous pollutants from over 580 coal and oil-fired power plants nationwide. The MATS rule was issued by the Obama administration as part of its larger policy limiting emissions from coal-fired power plants.[7]

The EPA later reconsidered the MATS rule and, in 2020, determined "that it is not 'appropriate and necessary' to regulate electric utility steam generating units under section 112 of the Clean Air Act (CAA)."[8]

A 2021 proposed rulemaking from the EPA seeks to revoke the 2020 action and reinstate the MATS rule.[9]

During the period that the MATS rule was in effect, Alaska had ## power plants subject to the mercury standards.[10]

Ozone standards

See also: Ground-level ozone standards

Federal ozone standards establish the acceptable amount of ground level ozone, commonly known as smog, which is formed when nitrogen oxide combines with other organic chemicals in the atmosphere. Automobiles, power plants, factories and manufacturing centers emit the nitrogen oxide necessary for ozone formation. In high concentrations, ozone is harmful to human health.[11][12]

EPA in 2015 lowered the acceptable amount of ground-level ozone (smog) in the air. The standards will go into effect in 2025. States would have between the years 2020 and 2037 to create and establish a plan to meet the standards, depending how much ozone forms in certain areas of a state.[13][14]

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Clean Power Plan

See also: Clean Power Plan and climate change

The EPA in 2015 finalized a regulatory action known as the Clean Power Plan aimed at mitigating what the agency views as potentially human-caused climate change. The plan aims to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from coal- and oil-fired power plants (fossil fuel-fired) and natural gas-fired power plants by 32 percent from 2005 levels by 2030. Each state would have to meet goals based on the number of fossil fuel- and natural gas-fired plants in the state.[15][16][17]

After several states challenged the plan in court, arguing in part that the plan exceeded the EPA's statutory authority, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit delayed the rule's implementation in June 2016. The Trump administration later moved to replace the Clean Power Plan with the Affordable Clean Energy rule. The D.C. Circuit vacated the Trump-era rule in January 2021, "giving the incoming Biden administration a clean slate for" drafting a new rule, according to Bloomberg.[18][19]

Carbon dioxide emissions

The following table provides information about annual carbon dioxide emissions in Alaska from 2010 to 2020:[20]

Carbon dioxide emissions in Alaska, 2010-2020 (in million metric tons of energy-related carbon dioxide)
Year Total carbon dioxide emissions
2020 36.0
2019 34.3
2018 34.5
2017 33.7
2016 33.4
2015 35.0
2014 33.9
2013 34.0
2012 36.2
2011 37.1
2010 37.1
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration

Land

Federal land policy

See also: Federal land policy

Federal land policy involves the conservation and management of natural resources on land owned by the federal government. Most federal land policies focus on conservation, recreation, oil and natural gas extraction, wildlife and forest management, and grazing.

The federal government as of 2018 owned around 640 million total acres of land (about 28 percent) of the 2.27 billion acres of land in the United States. Four federal agencies (the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), the National Park Service (NPS), the Forest Service (FS) oversee public lands for conservation, recreation, wildlife protection, grazing, energy production, and other purposes. The Department of Defense also oversees federal lands used for military, training, and related purposes. The majority of federal land is located in Alaska and 11 coterminous Western states[21]

Federal land ownership

See also: Federal land ownership by state

The table below features information about changes in federal land ownership in Alaska from 1990 to 2018:[21]

Change in federal land ownership in Alaska, 1990-2018
Year Total federal land (in acres) Percentage of state land owned by the federal government
2018 222,666,580 60.9%
2010 225,848,164 61.8%
2000 237,828,917 65.1%
1990 245,669,027 67.2%
Source: Congressional Research Service

Federal land management by agency

The following table features information about federal land management in Alaska by federal agency in 2018:[21]

Federal agency land management in Alaska, 2018
Agency Total federal land in state managed by agency (in acres) Percentage of total federal land in state
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) 71,397,880 32.1%
Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) 76,649,320 34.4%
National Park Service (NPS) 52,455,308 23.6%
Forest Service (FS) 22,138,560 9.9%
Department of Defense (DoD) 25,512 0.0%
Source: Congressional Research Service

National parks

The U.S. National Park Service (NPS) as of February 2023 oversaw what the agency describes as 424 units (often referred to as parks) and more than 150 related areas within the National Park System. The agency assists in managing national historic areas, wild and scenic rivers, historic landmarks, and national trails. The National Park System contained more than 85 million acres as of February 2023, including national parks, historical parks and sites, national monuments, battlefields and military parks, recreation areas, seashores, and parkways. More than 297 million visitors attended sites in the National Park System in 2021. NPS employed around 20,000 permanent, temporary, and seasonal employees as of February 2023.[22][23][24]

NPS operated 23 national parks in Alaska as of February 2023.[25]

The following table features visitation statistics for national parks in Alaska from 2017 to 2021.[26]

National Park Service visitation in Alaska, 2017-2021
Year Total recreation visits
2021 1,001,956
2020 406,688
2019 3,218,301
2018 2,920,249
2017 2,786,065
Source: U.S. National Park Service

Payments in lieu of taxes

See also: Payments in lieu of taxes

The U.S. Department of the Interior pays local governments each year to offset what they lose in property taxes due to non-taxable federal land within their borders, commonly known as payments in lieu of taxes (PILT). PILT payments go toward fire and police departments, public schools, road construction, and other local services. PILT amounts are based on population and the amount of federal land in a county. From 1977 (when PILT payments began) to 2022, the Interior Department paid out around $10.8 billion to states, territories, and Washington, D.C. PILT payments can be used for any governmental purpose.[27][28]

The following table features information about payments in lieu of taxes received by local governments in Alaska from 2017 to 2021.[29]

Total payments in lieu of taxes, Alaska, 2017-2021
Year Total payments in lieu of taxes
2022 $33,486,098
2021 $32,219,322
2020 $31,683,971
2019 $30,941,006
2018 $32,308,994
Source: U.S. National Park Service

Oil and natural gas activity

See also: Oil and natural gas extraction on federal land and BLM oil and gas leases by state

The federal government leases its land to private individuals and companies for energy development, including drilling for crude oil and natural gas, solar energy, and geothermal energy. Oil and natural gas drilling on federal lands in the United States is primarily overseen by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Private oil and natural gas companies apply for leases from the BLM to produce energy on federal land. About 26 million acres of federal land—12.8 million of which produced oil and gas in economic quantities—were leased to about 24,000 oil and gas developers operating 96,000 wells at the end of fiscal year 2018.[30]

The following table features information about oil and natural gas activity on federal land in Alaska from 2017 to 2021:[31][32]

Oil and natural gas activity on federal land in Alaska, 2017-2021
Year Oil production (in thousands of barrels) Natural gas production (in million cubic feet) Total leases in state Total leased acres in state
2021 830,089 13,233,556 333 2,640,783
2020 953,212 17,339,631 336 2,631,070
2019 1,280,420 18,449,806 244 1,579,834
2018 1,033,899 15,315,703 238 1,490,733
2017 1,057,576 16,042,898 229 1,484,339
Source: U.S. National Park Service

Water

Clean Water Act

See also: Implementation of the Clean Water Act

The Clean Water Act is a federal law regulating pollutants discharged into all waters of the United States, including lakes, rivers, streams, and wetlands. The federal government approves water quality and technology standards for major sources of water pollution, such as chemical plants, steel manufacturers, municipal facilities, and others. Each state must establish water quality standards for all bodies of water within its boundaries.[33]

Under the Clean Water Act, it is unlawful to discharge any pollutant from any source into navigable waters without a federal permit. The permit specifies what limitations or conditions apply to a facility before the facility may discharge any pollutants. Federal permits may contain facility-specific requirements and limitations depending on the water source.[34]

The following table provides information about the number of Alaska facilities subject to regulation under the Clean Water Act from 2014 to 2023:[35]

Clean Water Act permits, Alaska, 2014-2023
Year Number of facilities
2023 2,161
2022 2,505
2021 2,166
2020 1,752
2019 1,734
2018 1,685
2017 1,734
2016 1,792
2015 1,778
2014 1,543
Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "National Water Activity Dashboard"

Waste

Superfund sites and hazardous waste facilities

See also: Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act

Superfund is a federal program that addresses contaminated waste sites and their return to practical use. Superfund sites include oil refineries, smelting facilities, mines and other industrial areas. The federal government can compel the private entities responsible for a waste site to clean the site or face penalties. If the federal government cleans a waste site, it can compel the responsible company to reimburse the government for cleanup costs. Because Superfund sites are added and removed from a prioritized list on a regular basis, the total number of Superfund sites since the program's inception in 1980 is unknown.[36][37][38]

The federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act covers hazardous wastes, including their generation, treatment, storage and disposal. States may regulate hazardous wastes rather than the federal government. The EPA is responsible for all hazardous waste requirements if no state program exists. Hazardous waste regulations cover waste generators, transporters, treatment centers, storage and disposal facilities.[39]

Alaska had 6 Superfund sites and 1,438 regulated hazardous waste facilities as of February 2023.[40][41]

Endangered species

Endangered Species Act

See also: Endangered species in Alaska

The Endangered Species Act is a federal law that mandates the listing and conservation of endangered and threatened species. The legislation aims to prevent the extinction of vulnerable species throughout the United States and to recover a species' population to the point where listing the species as endangered or threatened is no longer necessary. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is responsible for the law's implementation.[12][42]

Alaska had 12 federally listed endangered or threatened plant or animal species as of February 2023. To view the full list, click here.[43]

Environmental ballot measures in Alaska

The following list features historical information about ballot measures relating to environmental issues in Alaska.

Natural resources

Environment

Water

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Recent environmental legislation in Alaska

The following list features information about environmental bills that have been introduced in or passed by the Alaska State Legislature in the last five years. To learn more about these bills, click the bill title. This information is provided by BillTrack50 and LegiScan.

Note: Due to the nature of the sorting process used to generate this list, some results may not be relevant to the topic. If no bills are displayed below, no legislation pertaining to this topic has been introduced in the legislature recently.

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, "Home page," accessed December 1, 2014
  2. Alaska Department of Natural Resources, "About DNR," accessed December 1, 2014
  3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Clean Air Act Requirements and History," accessed August 7, 2014
  4. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Understanding the Clean Air Act," accessed August 7, 2014
  5. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "History of the Clean Air Act," accessed August 7, 2014
  6. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Analyze Trends: EPA/State Air Dashboard," accessed February 9, 2023
  7. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Basic Information on Mercury and Air Toxics Standards," accessed January 5, 2015
  8. EPA, "Final Revised Supplemental Finding and Results of the Residual Risk and Technology Review," accessed February 2, 2023
  9. EPA, "Proposed Revocation of the 2020 Reconsideration and Affirmation of the Appropriate and Necessary Supplemental Finding," accessed February 2, 2023
  10. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Power Plants Likely Covered by the Toxics Rule," accessed January 19, 2016
  11. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Ground Level Ozone: Regulatory Actions," accessed February 2, 2016
  12. 12.0 12.1 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Overview of EPA's Proposal to Update the Air Quality Standards for Ground-Level Ozone," November 25, 2014 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "overview" defined multiple times with different content
  13. Washington Examiner, "EPA tries to appease green groups mad about ozone rules," October 1, 2015
  14. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Ground Level Ozone by the numbers," accessed February 2, 2016
  15. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Overview of the Clean Power Plan," accessed November 3, 2015
  16. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Clean Power Plan Toolbox for States," accessed November 3, 2015
  17. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Clean Power Plan - Rule Summary," August 3, 2015
  18. The Hill, "Supreme Court climate fight shakes up Senate races," February 10, 2016
  19. Bloomberg, "EPA’s Industry-Friendly Climate Rule Struck Down by Court (3)," January 19, 2021
  20. U.S. Energy Information Administration, "Energy-Related CO2 Emission Data Tables," accessed February 3, 2023
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 Congressional Research Service, "Federal Land Ownership: Overview and Data," December 29, 2014
  22. U.S. National Park Service, "About Us," accessed February 7, 2023
  23. National Park Service, "Visitation Numbers," accessed February 7, 2023
  24. National Park Service, "Organizational Structure of the National Park Service," accessed February 7, 2023
  25. National Park Service, "Alaska," accessed February 7, 2023
  26. U.S. National Park Service, "Visitation By State and By Park (2017 - Last Calendar Year)," accessed February 7, 2023
  27. U.S. Department of the Interior, "Payment in Lieu of Taxes," accessed February 1, 2023
  28. U.S. Department of the Interior, "Frequently Asked Questions," accessed February 8, 2016
  29. U.S. National Park Service, "Payment in Lieu of Taxes," accessed February 7, 2023
  30. Bureau of Land Management, "About the BLM Oil and Gas Program," accessed February 7, 2023
  31. U.S. Department of the Interior, "Natural Resources Revenue Data," accessed February 7, 2023
  32. Bureau of Land Management, "Oil and Gas Statistics," accessed February 7, 2023
  33. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Summary of the Clean Water Act,” accessed January 29, 2014
  34. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "NPDES Home," accessed September 23, 2014
  35. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Analyze Trends: EPA/State Wastewater Dashboard," accessed February 9, 2023
  36. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Superfund Glossary, S," accessed December 1, 2014
  37. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Superfund Glossary, N," accessed November 25, 2014
  38. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Introduction to the Hazard Ranking System (HRS)," accessed February 17, 2015
  39. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)," accessed August 11, 2014
  40. Environmental Protection Agency, "National Priorities List (NPL) Sites - by State," accessed February 9, 2023
  41. Environmental Protection Agency, "Analyze Trends: EPA/State Hazardous Waste Dashboard," accessed February 9, 2023
  42. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, "ESA Overview," accessed October 1, 2014
  43. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, "Listed species believed to or known to occur in each State," accessed February 9, 2023

[[Category:Environmental policy information by state