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First on Fox: Alaskan natives and residents This week, the vast borough communities of the Arctic Ocean rarely have the opportunity to discuss their concerns directly with White House officials 3,500 miles away in Washington.
Secretary of the Home Office Doug BurgumEnergy Secretary Chris Wright and EPA administrator Lee Zeldin joined local residents of Alaska government Mike Dunleavy and Utqiagvik (formerly Barrow), as part of a multi-day visit to the oil and gas sector.
Charles Lamp, a native of Kaktovik, is a major remote community at the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), until the President Donald Trump Officials assembled by Utqiagvik took office, North Slope residents and their energy development hope to be surrounded by the same distant federal government.
Alaska officials have tried to speak for them in the past 48-year-old environmental activists and ideologically with their federal officials, rather than developing the ANWR and any other activist living place.

State and federal officials visited North Slope Borough. (U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Indoor Department)
“I want to make one thing–Environmental groups are under attack in Kaktovik,” Lamp said.
“On the first day, President Trump told the Department of Fish and Wildlife that they denied their request. It was a remarkable thing for us. We were proud of the president at the time because he made sure that our ancestral homes would be stolen – (instead) stolen – and (instead) protected,” Lake said in the Northern Section, which is the working scope of the north because their development scope was the scope of their original homeland.
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“So, I really need to give President Trump a move about this and be able to write something and be able to write something (if another person) (if another person) (if another person) (Joe Biden and Kamala Harris) will win, and there is no doubt that our home will be stolen and we can do nothing about it. ” he said.
“Trump has the heart and the heart that can correct this mistake.”
He told Burgum that he invited Trump to Kaktovik for personal visits to ANWR and its “Section 1002” – the oil and gas development department.
Burgum said he thinks Trump will take the opportunity – the president has already surprised regional stakeholders and he is unwilling to consider asking the president to open up issues that he feels unwilling to.
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“President Trump really cared about this and cared deeply about it,” Burgum said, adding at a recent meeting that he shocked ConPhilliplips’ representative when he asked what they needed to improve North Slope operations.
When the company points out the path to improvement it will help, Trump uses rhetoric to why the road cannot be built, Burgum said.
“(They) are kind of like, ‘Wow, I don’t know we can ask that.’”
Wright also spoke at the UTQIAGVIK conference and added in a separate comment that he visited Prudhoe Bay Discovery – Action from the 1960s, First opened Alaska Energy development, and at some point represented a quarter of U.S. oil production.
“Unfortunately, over the past few decades, the long and slow decline in North Slope oil production – not because they have run out of oil. In fact, there are a lot of undeveloped undeveloped unproduced oil here. It’s because of federal regulations, bureaucracy. It makes it so expensive and difficult to operate, so it’s so,” Wright said.
He added that with the final construction of the “large, beautiful Gemini natural gas pipeline”, Alaska could become the key to global energy security by attracting buyers from South Korea and Japan to leave China.
“It’s great to be a part of history again in Alaska’s great North Slope oilfield,” Wright said.
Deng Leavy last week Global Conference on Sustainable Energy In Anchorage, this has also attracted the attention of potential stakeholders in Asia.