FYI
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2007 2:59 PM
Subject: Bush Lifts Ban on Drilling in Alaska Waters
For Immediate Release:
January, 9,
2007
Contact:
Eric Antebi 415-977-5747
Josh Dorner
202-675-2384
President Bush Lifts Ban on Oil
Drilling in Fragile Alaska Waters
Washington, D.C. - President Bush today
exercised his executive authority
to lift the ban on drilling off the
southwest coast of Alaska in the
fragile, salmon-rich waters of Bristol Bay.
Bristol Bay, one of the world’s
most productive marine systems for fish,
marine mammals and migratory
birds, has enjoyed federal protection since the
Exxon Valdez spill in 1989.
In response, Sierra Club Executive Director
Carl Pope issued the following
statement:
"Bristol Bay is one the most
important fisheries in America and in the
world. It's incredibly
reckless to risk such an outstanding natural
resource just to satisfy Big
Oil. Most Alaskans and Americans would agree
that it doesn't make sense
to sacrifice the world's largest salmon run and
an entire local economy to
give the oil industry another gift on its wish
list.
"This move will
do nothing to lower gas prices for American families or
energy costs for
American businesses, and will keep our nation dangerously
dependent on
oil. By contrast, if our cars, trucks and SUVs together
averaged 40
miles per gallon - something that is achievable with existing
technology - we
would save as much oil as the United States currently
imports from the
Persian Gulf, with another million barrels to
spare."
Background
Bristol Bay is home to the world’s largest wild
salmon run, high value red
king crab, large pollock and cod fisheries, huge
herring schools that
sustain the Bering Sea, and a primary halibut nursery
ground. This rich
marine life could be harmed by the seismic testing,
potential oil spills,
and contaminated drilling muds and produced water
associated with offshore
drilling. The region’s residents are heavily
dependent on the local marine
life for both direct sustenance through
subsistence and for sustainable
livelihoods through commercial
fishing.
Bristol Bay is an economically-critical salmon fishery, with an
estimated
net present value as high as $10 billion, and the area is prized
by
sportsmen for its salmon and halibut fishing opportunities. Its
lush
wetlands support vast bird populations and it provides essential
habitat
for the endangered Right whale.
More than 25 million fish are
harvested (commercial, sport and subsistence)
annually, contributing more
than $300 million and providing some 12,500
jobs. Sport fishermen eager to
test the famed fishing grounds spend about
$120 million a year.
The
Minerals Management Service (MMS) recently completed a public comment
period,
including more than 10 public hearings in Alaska, on their draft
Five-Year
OCS Leasing Program that proposes opening Bristol Bay in 2010.
Ten years ago,
Alaska bought back oil company drilling rights after an
outcry that drilling
could damage the state's most important salmon run.
Bush rescinded President
Clinton's longstanding "Executive OCS Leasing
Withdrawals" that were to
protect Alaska's fragile North Aleutian Basin
(Bristol Bay) until June 30,
2012. A similar bipartisan congressional OCS
moratorium protected
Bristol Bay starting with the Exxon Valdez oil spill
in 1989 until Senator
Ted Stevens (R-AK) led an effort to lift the ban in
2003. Today’s
announcement could spur action to reinstate the
congressional
moratorium.
For more information on Bristol Bay, please
visit
http://www.akmarine.org/ourwork/fbb.shtmlhttp://www.akmarine.org/pressroom/issuepaper-bristolbayoilandgas.pdf
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