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ICE WORLD
Murkowski: Obama's Alaska move an act of war
by Daniel J. Graeber
Washington (UPI) Jan 26, 2015


Canada contracts for Arctic patrol ships
Halifax, Nova Scotia (UPI) Jan 26, 2015 - Six Arctic Offshore Patrol Ships are being built by Irving Shipbuilding, Inc. as part of the Canadian government's National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy.

The government contract for the vessels is worth $1.85 million, government officials said.

"Our government is committed to ensuring that the Canadian Armed Forces and the Royal Canadian Navy have the equipment needed to monitor and defend Canadian waters, and to contribute to international naval operations well into the 21st century," said Minister for National Defense Rob Nicholson. "The Arctic Offshore Patrol Ships will better enable the Navy to assert and enforce sovereignty in Canadian waters, including in the Arctic."

Public Works and Government Services Canada said building of an initial block for the first AOPS is scheduled for the summer. Full production will begin in September, with the first vessel scheduled for delivery in 2018.

The DeWolf-class Arctic Offshore Patrol Ships will be equipped with a variety of sensors and will also be able to operate and support the new Cyclone naval helicopters. They will have the ability to operate in first-year ice with a thickness of as much as three feet and operate for as long as four months.

The build contract is cost-reimbursable, incentive fee-based.,

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

The Obama administration has declared war on the economic future of Alaska by proposing new acreage as protected wilderness, congressional leaders said.

The White House announced plans Sunday to set as 12 million of the 19 million acres in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska as protected wilderness.

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, chairwoman of the Senate Energy Committee, said in a statement President Barack Obama launched an assault on the health of the state's economy with the policy recommendation.

"It's clear this administration does not care about us, and sees us as nothing but a territory," she said in a statement. "We will fight back with every resource at our disposal."

Alaska's government last year said it was able to award oil and gas drilling licenses after clarifying authority near the border of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Former Gov. Sean Parnell said parts of the refuge area may contain "billions of barrels of recoverable oil."

Some lawmakers objected to the state decision, calling on the Department of Interior to "protect the biological heart of the refuge from oil and gas exploration and drilling."

Murkowski's counterpart in the House of Representatives, Rob Bishop, R-Utah., said the president was harming the economic prospects of the entire nation.

"It is irrational to continue to bow to environmental extremists by taking away opportunities to give our nation energy independence while squashing the futures of local economies," he said.

In a weekly status report, the federal government said oil production in Alaska was behind most of the declines in output.

For the Obama administration, the action was about protecting national heritage. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell it would create the largest ever wilderness refuge, if Congress chooses to act.

The Natural Resources Defense Council said the action was the "best news" for Alaska's wilderness since the refuge area was established by President Dwight Eisenhower in 1960.


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ICE WORLD
Obama recommends extended wilderness zone in Alaska
Washington (AFP) Jan 25, 2015
US President Barack Obama said Sunday he would recommend a large swath of Alaska be designated as wilderness, the highest level of federal protection, in a move angering state oil proponents. By setting aside 12.28 million acres (five million hectares) of public land in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, or ANWR, as wilderness, the oil-rich area would be sealed off from roads and developme ... read more


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