The mining newspaper for Alaska and Canada's North
Forest Service advances roadless rule exemption for SE Alaska North of 60 Mining News – October 18, 2019
Alaska Gov. Michael Dunleavy and Alaska's entire delegation in Washington D.C. welcomed the Trump administration's plan to exempt the Tongass National Forest from the 2001 Roadless Rule, which would lift impediments to forestry, mining and other activities across Southeast Alaska.
"Today's announcement on the roadless rule is further proof that Alaska's economic outlook is looking brighter every day," Dunleavy said on the U.S. Forest Service Oct. 15 announcement that it is considering the options for lifting restrictions in the Tongass.
Established by the Clinton administration in 2001, the roadless rule prohibits road building and logging on 58.5 million acres of national forest lands, including more than 9.2 million acres of the Tongass.
In 2003, the Bush administration exempted the Southeast Alaska forest from the conservation measure, only to be re-instated by U.S. District Judge John Sedwick in 2011.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which is over the U.S. Forest Service, is now developing an Alaska-specific roadless rule that would allow for responsible resource development in the Tongass.
Alaska's senators and congressmen on Capitol Hill hailed this a major win for Southeast Alaska and the state as a whole.
"As Alaskans know well, the roadless rule hinders our ability to responsibly harvest timber, develop minerals, connect communities, or build energy projects to lower costs – including renewable energy projects like hydropower, all of which severely impedes the economy of Southeast," said Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska.
Conservationists, on the other hand, are rallying against the lifting of this rule that prevents development across the Tongass, which extends for more than 500 miles and covers roughly 80 percent of the Southeast Alaska Panhandle.
"The removal of Roadless Rule protections in the Tongass threatens tourism, salmon populations, food security, and some of the wildest remaining places in the country," said SalmonState Executive Director Tim Bristol.
Weighing the alternatives
Under Dunleavy, the state of Alaska petitioned President Donald Trump and USDA Secretary Sonny Perdue to completely exempt the Tongass National Forest from the roadless rule in favor of state-specific management of the forest.
As a result of this petition, which was supported by Rep. Don Young, Sen. Lisa Murkowski and Sen. Sullivan, the USDA has launched an Environmental Impact Statement that puts forward a range of alternatives for roadless management in the Tongass.
These alternatives are:
• Alternative 1: take no action and leave all of Alaska under the 2001 Roadless Rule, including the Tongass National Forest.
• Alternative 2: provide regulatory protection for 89 percent of key watersheds inside roadless areas and convert 18,000 old-growth acres and 10,000 young-growth acres previously identified as unsuitable timber lands to suitable timber lands.
• Alternative 3: provide regulatory protections for all key watersheds inside and outside roadless areas; create a community priority roadless designation that allows for recreational development and timber sales under 1 million board feet; and convert 76,000 old-growth acres and 14,000 young-growth acres previously identified as unsuitable timber lands to suitable timber lands.
• Alternative 4: restrict harvest and road-building activities in scenic viewsheds and 88 percent of key watersheds inside roadless areas; and would convert 158,000 old-growth acres and 15,000 young-growth acres previously identified as unsuitable timber lands to suitable timber lands.
• Alternative 5: remove 2.3 million acres from roadless area designation, protecting some (59 percent) of key watersheds; and convert 165,000 old-growth acres and 17,000 young-growth acres previously identified as unsuitable timber lands to suitable timber lands.
• Alternative 6: exempt the entire Tongass National Forest from the 2001 Roadless Rule, which is fully responsive to Alaska's petition.
Alternative 6 is USDA and Alaska's preferred alternative. This alternative removes all 9.2 million acres of inventoried roadless acres; and converts 165,000 old-growth acres and 20,000 young-growth acres previously identified as unsuitable timber lands to suitable timber lands.
"I'm very pleased the administration has listened to Alaskans and is proposing a full exemption from the roadless rule as its preferred alternative," said Murkowski.
USDA said conservation of roadless values within this large forest that spans almost the entire length of the Southeast Alaska panhandle would be achieved through other means, including the Tongass Land Management Plan.
"I am optimistic that this decision will allow for proper management of the Tongass to provide opportunities for tourism, fishing, and wildlife viewing as well as mining, energy development, and timber," said Congressman Young.
Good for SE Alaska mining
In addition to potential timber harvest, the lifting of the roadless rule is good news for companies hoping to develop mineral projects in Southeast Alaska.
One of the most advanced of these potential mine projects is Bokan Mountain, a project on Prince of Wales Island that hosts rare earth element and other metals considered critical to the United States.
Earlier this week, Ucore Rare Metals Inc. reported that the Dotson Ridge deposit at Bokan hosts 38,500 metric tons of six critical minerals – niobium, zirconium, beryllium, hafnium, titanium and vanadium – that could potentially be recovered in conjunction with the 16 rare earths already identified there.
For more information on the suite of critical metals at Bokan, read Ucore adds 6 critical metals to Bokan REEs published on Oct. 15.
"This potential action, combined with Governor Dunleavy's request for high priority infrastructure project designation for Bokan, should allow Ucore to gain approvals for the project in a substantially shorter time frame, adding to the project's appeal as a potential near-term source of critical rare earths to the American defense, energy, and technology sectors," said Ucore Rare Metals COO Mike Schrider.
Dunleavy's request was proposed in an August nomination of Bokan Mountain as a high priority infrastructure project under Trump Executive Order 13766, which would expedite the permitting process for this potential critical metals mine.
In addition to providing jobs and other economic activity in the state, the Alaska governor sees Bokan Mountain as a potential domestic source of rare earths and other critical metals for which the United States is heavily dependent on imports for its supply.
"The state of Alaska understands the critical nature of a secure supply chain for rare earth minerals in the United States," Dunleavy penned in his Aug. 9 nomination letter. "We are seeking your support to have this Alaskan rare earth deposit deemed a high priority infrastructure project and recognize this designation will allow for a more efficient permitting process to ensure the resource is available for development in a reasonable time-frame."
Public input requested
As for the EIS for exempting the Tongass from the roadless rule, the USDA will open a 60-day public comment period on the six alternatives put forward on Oct. 18.
During this time, which ends on Dec. 17, the Forest Service will be hosting a series of public meeting and subsistence hearings.
Comments can be submitted:
• on the project website – http://www.fs.usda.gov/project/?project=54511;
• via email at [email protected];
• by mail at USDA Forest Service, Attn: Alaska Roadless Rule, P.O. Box 21628, Juneau, Alaska, 99802;
• by fax to 907-586-7852 or
• in-person to Forest Service, 709 W. 9th Street, Room 535B, Juneau, Alaska.
USDA said written comments will help inform its final decision about a roadless rule specific to the Tongass. The secretary of agriculture is expected to make a final decision on partially or completely exempting the Tongass from the 2011 Roadless Rule by June 2020.
Reader Comments(0)