For Immediate Release: January 11, 2006
Contact: Betsy Goll, (907)
830-0184 (cell)
Annie Strickler, (202)
675-2384
BUSH ADMINISTRATION ABANDONS LONG-STANDING
PROTECTIONS FOR
CRITICAL
WILDLIFE HABITAT ON ALASKA’S NORTH SLOPE
Oil Leasing Plan Ignores Public
Opinion, Threatens Key Habitat for Big
Game
and Waterfowl Around Teshekpuk Lake
Anchorage, Alaska -- Ignoring vocal
opposition from Alaska natives,
scientists and sportsmen, the Bush
administration today opened for oil
leasing 100 percent of the Teshekpuk Lake
Special Area in Northwestern
Alaska. The decision repeals the last remaining
protections for critical
waterfowl and big game habitat around Teshekpuk
Lake, protections first
established by Reagan administration Interior
Secretary James Watt who is
not usually noted for conservation achievements.
The final plan threatens
to strike a significant blow to wildlife populations
and hunting
opportunities in Alaska and across the nation.
"It is
clear that this administration cares much more about doing favors
for the oil
industry than conserving wildlife for future generations," said
Betsy Goll,
Sierra Club’s Alaska Regional Representative. "Even James Watt
protected
Teshekpuk Lake, yet the Bush administration can’t deem one acre
of this
magnificent region worthy of protection."
The Teshekpuk Lake area is one
of unparalled big game and waterfowl
habitat. One in four of the
world’s population of Pacific black brant
utilize the area.
Approximately 37,000 black brant, 30 percent of the
entire population,
utilized the Teshekpuk Lake area for molting in 2001.
Other waterfowl that
rely on the area include lesser snow geese,
white-fronted geese and
long-tailed duck that find critical nesting and
molting habitat in the Lake’s
environs. Spectacled and Steller’s eiders,
both listed as "threatened
species" under the federal Endangered Species
Act, use the area for
nesting. Big game species found in the area include
the 45,000-member
Teshekpuk Lake Caribou Herd that provides a subsistence
hunting base for the
remote communities of Nuiqsut, Barrow, Atqasuk and
Wainwright as well as
sport hunting opportunities.
BLM’s draft plan, released in June 2004,
elicited more than 220,000
comments from across the nation with the vast
majority opposed to oil
drilling in the area. Other federal agencies,
including the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, also raised
concerns.
"This is a shortsighted decision that places efforts to
conserve waterfowl
for future generations at risk," said Bart Semcer, the
Sierra Club’s Fish
and Wildlife Policy Specialist in Washington, DC.
"If initiatives like the
North American Waterfowl Management Plan are going
to succeed, public lands
like those around Teshekpuk Lake need to be
conserved as vigorously as
partnerships on private land."
Congress and
three Secretaries of the Interior have recognized the
ecological importance
of the area around Teshekpuk Lake. Former Secretary
of Interior James Watt
closed an area of more than 200,000 acres north of
Teshekpuk Lake to oil and
gas leasing. In 1998, Interior Secretary Bruce
Babbitt established an
oil and gas leasing plan for the northeast Reserve,
which protected much of
the sensitive habitat around Teshekpuk Lake from
leasing or oil and gas
facilities.
In early 2004, the Bush administration announced its intent
to alter the
1998 plan, and in June 2004 the BLM released a draft plan that
proposed
opening 96 percent of the entire Northeast Planning Area to oil
leasing. In
statements delivered in a gathering including extractive industry
leaders
in Anchorage last week, BLM Alaska Director Henri Bisson acknowledged
BLM’s
plan to dismantle long-standing rules that had set core wildlife
habitats
in the area north of Teshekpuk Lake off limits to drilling since the
Reagan
administration.
"Despite the administration’s spin, 100 percent
of the Teshekpuk Lake area
will ultimately be open to oil leasing, and not a
single acre will be
permanently dedicated to conservation. The bottom
line is that one of
North America’s best remaining waterfowl habitats will be
fragmented by
roads, pipelines, air strips, gravel mines and industrial
sprawl," said
Goll.
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