Arctic Ocean drilling draws strong objections 
by Dan Joling / The Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska - While some federal agencies are expressing caution on
Arctic development, the federal Minerals Management Service continues to
forge ahead with petroleum exploration drilling off the shores of the
remote northern Alaska coast.

Environmental groups say the location is environmentally fragile,
hammered by global warming and woefully unprepared to handle a major
spill.

It's likely a court ultimately will decide whether drilling will take
place in the remote marine waters.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced Monday that the MMS had
conditionally approved an exploratory drilling plan for 2010 in the
Chukchi Sea by a subsidiary of Shell Oil. He said reducing the country's
dependence on foreign oil must include responsible exploration of
conventional resources.

The Chukchi Sea starts east of Barrow, America's northernmost city. It
follows Alaska's northwest coast to the Bering Strait. Alaska shares the
Chukchi and its whale, seal, walrus and polar bear populations with the
Russian Far East.

Shell Gulf of Mexico, Inc., in 2008 paid $2.1 billion for leases in the
Chukchi. Shell Alaska Vice President Pete Slaiby said exploring in the
Chukchi could lead to tens of thousands of jobs and extended life for the
trans-Alaska pipeline.

That's music to the ears of Alaska elected officials. The pipeline has
operated recently at less than one-third capacity. Alaskans pay no state
income or sales tax and 90 percent of the state's general fund revenue is
taken from the oil industry. New drilling is lauded by any incumbent
interested in re-election.

Gov. Sean Parnell praised Salazar's announcement and said Alaska's Outer
Continental shelf contains an estimated 27 billion barrels of recoverable
oil, more than twice what's been produced on the North Slope since 1977.
The OCS has 130 trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas, a
commodity he hopes could help fill a proposed multibillion dollar
pipeline to a distribution center in Alberta.

Shell proposes three Chukchi exploration wells using a drill ship and
support vessels. The nearest settlement is Wainwright, population 534, an
Inupiat Eskimo village whose residents live off bowhead and beluga whale,
seal, walrus, caribou, polar bear, birds and fish.

A day after Salazar's announcement, U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska,
announced she would introduce a bill to study building a deep water port
in the Arctic. That's just one piece of infrastructure missing along some
of the wildest coastline of America's wildest state.

In an Associated Press interview in February, Rear Adm. Gene Brooks,
then-commander of the Coast Guard district that oversees Alaska, called
his agency's Arctic experience "episodic and superficial." Until a few
years ago, the improbability of Arctic shipping meant no one even
bothered compiling routine navigational data, Brooks said.

But with summer sea ice in recent years shrinking to nearly 40 percent
less than the long-term average, the agency is sending forays north and
planning for its challenges.

The Arctic coast lacks an integrated network of marine radio coverage,
Brooks said. In summer 2008, the Coast Guard found its boats were too big
to easily launch from the sand beaches of Barrow and the 120-mile range
of its helicopters too small, requiring fueling hops.

Shell's drilling ship would be accompanied by an ice management vessel,
an ice class anchor handling vessel, and oil spill response vessels.

Environmental groups, however, doubt Shell's claims that it could
effectively clean up an oil spill where gale force winds, ice-filled
waters, and complete darkness are plausible. They also say MMS is
allowing exploration when basic information is lacking, such as
population assessments of polar bears and walrus.

"We don't even know enough to know what we don't know," said Michael
Levine, an attorney for Oceana. "We need to understand what species are
in the ocean from the bottom of the food chain to the top, how climate
change is affecting the ocean system, how currents move and what risks
are presented by industrial development in a changing ocean," he said.

Nicholas Pardi, spokesman for MMS, said the agency is confident in the
environmental studies in place to approve Shell's plan. Shell's proposed
spill also met the agency's standards.

Shell faces other hurdles, including an air discharge permit from the
Environmental Protection Agency a drilling permit from MMS, Pardi said.

The 5-year MMS drilling plan also is undergoing review in response to a
U.S. Court of Appeals. Stan Senner of Ocean Conservancy said a federal
precedent in the Arctic has already been set. The National Marine
Fisheries Service, under the Commerce Department and not Salazar's
Interior, closed U.S. Arctic waters to commercial fishing because of the
unknowns of how fishing would change the region.

"The Minerals Management Service should follow this precautionary
example," he said.
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