Contact: NATIVE VILLAGE OF POINT HOPE – ALASKA WILDERNESS LEAGUE – CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY – DEFENDERS OF WILDLIFE – NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY – NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL – NORTHERN ALASKA ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER –OCEAN CONSERVANCY – OCEANA – PACIFIC ENVIRONMENT – RESISTING ENVIRONMENTAL DESTRUCTION ON INDIGENOUS LANDS (REDOIL) – SIERRA CLUB – THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY
Lily Tuzroyluke, Native Village of
Point Hope, 907-368-2330
Robert Thompson, REDOIL, 907-640-6119
Rosemary Ahtuangaruak, REDOIL, 907-575-7761
Eric Myers, National Audubon Society (Audubon Alaska), 907-276-7034
Emilie Surrusco, Alaska Wilderness League, 202-544-5205
Rebecca Noblin, Center for Biological Diversity, 907- 274-1110
James Navarro, Defenders of Wildlife, 202-772-0247
Bob Deans, Natural Resources Defense Council, 202-289-2393
Pamela A. Miller, Northern Alaska Environmental Center, 907-452-5021
Andrew Hartsig, Ocean Conservancy, 907-229-1690
Michael LeVine, Oceana, 907-723-0136
Whit Sheard, Pacific Environment, 907-982-7095
Dan Ritzman, Sierra Club, 907-276-4044
Nicole Whittington-Evans, The Wilderness Society, 907-272-9453
Erik Grafe, Earthjustice, 907-277-2540
Shell Oil Chukchi Sea Drilling Plans Challenged
Analysis of Impacts Sorely Lacking
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Anchorage, AK – Conservation and Alaska Native groups called for a
timeout on oil drilling in the Arctic Ocean’s ChukchiSea
yesterday, filing a legal challenge against Shell Oil’s permit to drill in the region
next summer.The U.S. Department of the
Interior’s Minerals Management Service (MMS)
approved drilling in the ChukchiSea after doing only an
abbreviated and internal review of its potential harms and despite significant concerns
surrounding Shell’s oil leases.
Last spring, a federal appeals
court told the Interior Department that it needed to take a more complete look
at how oil and gas development would harm the area’s environment – an
assignment the Interior Department has not finished despite moving forward with
approving Shell’s drilling.Additionally,
the lease sale for the leases on which Shell would drill is also the subject of
unresolved litigation in the Alaska
Federal District Court.
Under Shell’s plan, a huge
514-foot-long drill ship and an armada of support vessels and aircraft would
patrol the waters of the icy Arctic Ocean, generating
industrial noise in the ocean, emitting tons of air pollutants, including
heat-trapping gases, and thousands of barrels of water pollutants.The ChukchiSea
is habitat for endangered bowhead whales, threatened polar bears, walrus and a host
of other wildlife – many of which are vital to sustaining the thousands-year
old subsistence way of life of Alaska Native coastal communities.
Shell’s plan to drill in the ChukchiSea is part of a larger Arctic drilling
program slated to begin in 2010.Last
October, Secretary Salazar also approved Shell’s plan to drill up to three
wells in the Beaufort Sea in 2010, also after
only cursory environmental review.In
December, conservation and Alaska Native groups challenged that approval.
In addition to the Interior
Department’s approval of Shell’s drilling, Shell still needs air emissions and
ocean discharge permits from the Environmental Protection Agency.It also needs marine mammal harassment permits
from the National Marine Fisheries Service.These agencies can take a different path than Interior.
Secretary Salazar’s approval of
Shell’s drilling also runs directly counter to other federal agencies’
initiatives to manage the region with a science-based approach, including a protective
Arctic Fisheries Management Plan adopted by the Department of Commerce.
The Arctic
is a region under great stress from climate change.The Arctic ecosystem depends on sea ice to
thrive. As climate change ravages the
region – the Arctic is warming twice as fast
as the rest of the world – this sea ice melts at a rapid pace.
Scientists now predict that summer sea ice
could be gone within a decade, threatening the very existence of species such
as polar bears, seals, and walrus, that make the ice their home. Industrial development in these waters will
only compound the problems.
Shell’s drilling would take place
directly in the endangered bowhead whale’s migration pathway through the
Chukchi and Beaufort seas.It threatens
harm to bowheads, including mothers and calves, walrus, and other marine
species and to Alaska Native communities that depend on these species for their
subsistence way of life.
Shell’s drilling brings the threat
of oil spills.Nonetheless, MMS downplays
the risks and impacts of large oil spills, claiming that large spills simply
won’t happen during exploration.However,
if a large oil spill were to happen, there is no technology and little capacity
to adequately clean it up in the Arctic’s icy
conditions.Coast Guard Commandant
Admiral Thad Allen noted in a recent Senate committee field hearing in Alaska that this lack of capacity to clean up a spill in
the Arctic could spell disaster for the Arctic’s
pristine waters.
Yesterday’s challenge was filed in the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals by the Native Village of Point Hope, Alaska Wilderness League,
Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife, National Audubon
Society, Natural Resources Defense Council, Northern Alaska Environmental Center,
Ocean Conservancy, Oceana, Pacific Environment, Resisting Environmental
Destruction on Indigenous Lands (REDOIL), Sierra Club, and The Wilderness
Society.The organizations are being
represented by Earthjustice, a nonprofit environmental law firm.
Statements of Alaska Native and Conservation
Group representatives
“The
ocean is our garden.We rely on it for
subsistence foods that have sustained us and our culture for thousands of
years.MMS approved Shell’s drilling in
our ocean next summer without even responding to our concerns.Its approval recklessly endangers our way of
life,” said Lily Tuzroyluke, Executive Director of the NativeVillage
of Point Hope.
“We are deeply concerned about the
increasing industrialization of the Arctic Ocean and its effects on indigenous
people of the Arctic.Noise from Shell’s drilling can harm whales
and other animals we rely on for our subsistence way of life.Air pollution sickens our communities.An oil spill would have devastating
consequences for years to come, especially since there is no way to clean up
oil in the icy Arctic Ocean.MMS has ignored our voice and approved
Shell’s drilling without fully analyzing and disclosing the risks and potential
impacts.Our ecosystem and
culture should not be put in
jeopardy for the profit of the oil industry,”
said Rosemary Ahtuangaruak, Inupiat resident of Nuiqsut and REDOIL member.
“We were really hoping for a new, careful approach by the
federal government toward America’s
Arctic,” said David Dickson, Western
Arctic and Oceans Program Director for Alaska
Wilderness League.“This
disappointing shortcut approval for Shell’s drilling program indicates that the
old drill now approach, regardless of the risks, is still in place.”
“America’s Arctic is already under great stress from global
warming while our understanding of the Arctic Ocean ecosystem is extremely
limited and there is no effective means of responding to an oil spill in the
bad weather and broken ice conditions common to the area,” said Eric Myers, Senior Policy Representative of
Audubon Alaska.
“The Arctic is reeling from
the impacts of climate change. The sea ice that polar bears and walrus need to
survive is melting at an alarming rate. In the face of such rapid change and
instability, the Obama administration must proceed with extreme caution in America’s Arctic.
If it doesn’t, it risks being remembered as the administration that turned this
precious place into a polluted industrial zone,” said Rebecca Noblin, Alaska Director for Center for Biological Diversity.
“The risk of a spill in the Arctic
is a reality, and if a spill does happen, we’d have no proven technology to
clean it up,” said Karla Dutton,
the Alaska
program director for Defenders of Wildlife. “Drilling in the ChukchiSea may pollute the water and push
imperiled animals such as polar bears and walrus, already threatened by global
warming, even closer to extinction.”
“The Obama administration
has prioritized moving to clean energy and addressing climate change, and
protecting the Arctic from
drilling should be part of that approach,” said Chuck Clusen, Alaska Project Director for Natural Resources
Defense Council. “As we move forward with cutting carbon pollution at
home and around the world, the Department of Interior should make better
choices for the Arctic, and not give in
to the unreasonable demands of the oil industry.”
“Shell’s drilling brings with it
the risk of large oil spills. Chronic spills are a fact of life from oil
and gas operations on Alaska’s North Slope, where over 6,000 spills have occurred since
1996, and more than 400 of these took place at offshore oil fields.In the icy conditions of the Arctic Ocean,
there is no way to effectively clean up spilled oil,”said Pamela A. Miller, Alaska
Program Director for NorthernAlaskaEnvironmentalCenter.
“The Arctic is our planet’s
air conditioner, and it plays a key role in regulating our global climate.Expanding industrial uses in a region that is
poorly understood and already under enormous stress could have grave consequences,
not only for the Arctic, but for the planet as
a whole,” said Andrew Hartsig of Ocean
Conservancy.
“We all deserve clean
air and clean water,” said Michael
LeVine, Pacific Senior Counsel for Oceana. “Shell, like anyone else,
must comply with the law, and it is the government’s responsibility to enforce
the laws that protect our air, water and ocean resources. Neither Shell
nor MMS has lived up to its legal obligations in this case, and it is our
responsibility to take action to make sure that our air and water are
protected.”
“It is incomprehensible that new drilling in the ChukchiSea—ground zero for the impacts of
climate change—is being given the green-light with only a cursory environmental
and sociocultural review,” said Whit
Sheard, Alaska Program Director of Pacific Environment.“Secretary Salazar needs to pay more respect
to the very clear message coming from both traditional indigenous subsistence
users and the global scientific community:these Bush-era high-risk plans to industrialize the Arctic
Ocean are too much, too soon, too fast.”
“It’s irresponsible for Shell to be pursuing dangerous
offshore oil development when they know they can’t clean up oil spills in the
Arctic’s broken sea ice.Instead of
putting our children’s heritage at risk, we should be investing in the clean
energy economy, which will create jobs, fight global warming, and leave our
last wild places intact,” said Dan
Ritzman, Sierra Club Alaska
Program Director.
“Oil companies and politicians insist that it is possible to
explore and develop for oil in Alaska
without harm to wildlife and the environment. But oil development is inherently
a dirty business. At every stage from exploration to production to
transportation, oil development negatively impacts the environment. Instead of
moving forward with piecemeal and poorly analyzed development that puts Arctic
wildlife and subsistence cultures at risk, the Obama Administration should take
a time-out on all new Arctic oil exploration and development until we have a
far better understanding of the science and potential impacts of development,
particularly in the face of climate change,” said Nicole Whittington-Evans, acting regional director of TheWilderness Society Alaska office.
“Other federal agencies from which Shell must
obtain additional permits to drill have choices to make – follow the Interior
Department’s rush to develop oil before we know its impacts or follow the
growing consensus that the we need to proceed with caution in this unspoiled
place already under great stress from climate change,” said Erik
Grafe of Earthjustice.