Oil reserves in Alaska, U.S. 1980-2021
oil production in Alaska has similarly declined.
In 2017, the U.S. government implemented a law that allowed for parts of Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to be leased for oil drilling in a bid to support tax cuts for corporations. A U.S. Geological Survey estimates the coastal plain area up for oil leases could hold close to 16 billion barrels of oil. Despite concerns from environmentalists and Native Alaskan tribes questioning the necessity of establishing even more oilfields, a court ruling in early January 2021 allowed for lease sale to proceed.
Alaska had proved oil reserves amounting to nearly 3.13 billion barrels as of 2021. Proved reserves in the northernmost U.S. state are only a third of what they used to be in 1980, and In 2017, the U.S. government implemented a law that allowed for parts of Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to be leased for oil drilling in a bid to support tax cuts for corporations. A U.S. Geological Survey estimates the coastal plain area up for oil leases could hold close to 16 billion barrels of oil. Despite concerns from environmentalists and Native Alaskan tribes questioning the necessity of establishing even more oilfields, a court ruling in early January 2021 allowed for lease sale to proceed.