Ninth Circuit denies privacy to oil company over Alaska drilling data
Source: Courthouse News Service
May 27, 2026
(CN) A Ninth Circuit panel determined on Wednesday that no federal law requires petroleum well data from an oil and gas company to remain private. A lower court ruled previously Alaskas Oil and Gas Conservation Commission couldnt release data about wells ConocoPhillips Alaska, Inc. wanted shielded because federal law preempts a state statute requiring the disclosure.
But U.S. Circuit Judge Eric Miller, a Donald Trump appointee, writing for the three-judge panel, said no supremacy clause issues exist with the Alaska petroleum reserve. That clause means federal law trumps state statute when theres a conflict, but Miller didnt see any express conflict.
ConocoPhillips argues that the Production Act expressly preempts Alaska law, Miller said. That argument gets off to a difficult start because the Production Act does not have a preemption clause. The company conceded that point, but argued the act incorporates a preemption clause from another law. The panel was unconvinced. Miller wrote that the Production Act incorporates certain conditions listed in another law data-submission requirements and nothing else.
States have no power to collect data from companies operating on the Outer Continental Shelf, Miller wrote. But Congress included provisions making that information, given to the federal government, available to the states. The federal government can share that data, though states cant disclose it.
Read more: https://courthousenews.com/ninth-circuit-denies-privacy-to-oil-company-over-alaska-drilling-data/
Link to
ORDER (PDF) -
https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2026/05/27/23-35512.pdf