Congressman Boswell is on the House Transportation Committee which will
have a Hearing on May 19th.
05/19/2010- :Deepwater Horizon: Oil Spill Prevention and Response
Measures, and Natural Resource Impacts: 2167 Rayburn House Office
Building : 10:00AM  
It would be great to get some calls into his office raising awareness
about the risk the Arctic Ocean is under - in less that 55 days Shell Oil
will be able to begin exploration drilling. See more information below.

Boswell phone numbers : Des Moines  (515) 282-1909   or DC  202-225-3806 



The ongoing Gulf disaster has rendered the future of offshore drilling in
this country uncertain.  Nowhere is an immediate evaluation into the
practices and realities of offshore oil development more urgent than in
the Arctic Ocean.  
 
Below is information about the dangerous offshore development that is
imminent in the Arctic.   
  
>>>>>>>>>>> 
 
This week, Shell Oil’s 514-foot long drill ship will leave port and start
its long journey to the Arctic’s Chukchi Sea. Soon after, it will be
joined by a few support vessels and aircraft that will make up this
summer’s drilling team in these pristine waters where the nearest boat
dock is 250 miles away. On July 1, this team is slated to begin an
operation that will pursue the same purpose as the Deepwater Horizon rig
in the Gulf of Mexico – exploratory drilling.
 
The drilling plans for the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas in the Arctic are
plagued with many of the same deficiencies that were recently exposed in
the Gulf plans. Moreover, the response capacity in the Arctic is only a
fraction of that which is currently failing in the Gulf.  Also, the
environment of the Arctic is much harsher and less understood than off
the coast of Louisiana.  
 
A few key facts:
·         As of today, Arctic drilling activity could take place between
July and October (when freeze up begins).

·         Arctic waters sustain more than 150 species of fish, including
ecologically important populations of Arctic cod, Pacific herring,
Pacific sand lance, Arctic flounder, and several types of cisco and
whitefish. These fish, along with crabs, mollusks and krill, provide the
foundation of the Arctic marine food chain that supports extraordinary
wildlife populations of global significance including polar bears,
walruses and ice seals, along with bowhead, beluga and gray whales. 
Alaska Native communities rely on these resources for their survival and
way of life.
 
·         Drilling prospects range from 60 to 140+ miles offshore in the
previously undeveloped Chukchi Sea and between 16 - 22 miles offshore in
the Beaufort Sea – off of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.  All of
the proposed drilling would take place in the proposed critical habitat
for the polar bear. 
 
·         Like BP’s exploration plan for the Deepwater Horizon well,
Shell has not planned for a catastrophic blowout occurrence during
exploration in the Beaufort or Chukchi Seas
o        For example, in its exploration plan, Shell states (pg. 160), “a
large oil spill, such as a crude oil release from a blowout, is extremely
rare and not considered a reasonably foreseeable impact.”
 
·         Drilling in the Arctic will take place in shallow water, around
130 – 325 feet deep.  In 2007, MMS issued a report in which they
concluded that shallow water blowouts are the most common.  In fact in
the period studied, 19 of the 39 blowouts occurred in shallow water
depths of 0 – 200 feet.  
 
·         During the proposed drilling period there are storms that can
last for days producing up to 20 ft. seas and sustained wind speeds of
33+ knots.
o        Shell identified operating limits for spill response in their
contingency plan, for example, stating “[w] inds above 15 knots with 30
knot gusts are strong enough to make hoists and lifts unsafe…” 
o        Mechanical clean up was halted in 8 foot sees in the Gulf.
 
·         In its drilling contingency plan Shell assumes that if a
blowout were to occur, the drill rig would be unharmed and would be able
to engage in spill prevention measures and, if necessary, drill a relief
well.  In both the Timor Sea Montara blowout and the ongoing Gulf of
Mexico blowout, however, the rig was burned and/or sunk and not able to
engage in any spill prevention measures. Futhermore, to date Shell has
not met MMS's requirement to identify an alternative rig that could drill
a relief well, and there is no quality rig anywhere in the area.
 
·         The US Coast Guard has testified to a Senate subcommittee and
made numerous statements that they lack the capacity to respond to a
spill in the Arctic. 
 
·         MMS’s 5 year OCS drilling program, which allowed the proposed
Chukchi exploration, was deemed illegal in April of 2009 by the DC
Circuit Court which held MMS provided an “irrational” analysis of the
environmental sensitivity of the proposed development area.  The court
has not made a final ruling on the revised version of this plan.
 
MMS must acknowledge the risk and potential impacts of a blowout by
completing a full Environment Impact Statement (EIS).  A full EIS would
also permit MMS to address the significant gaps in the Alaska MMS’s NEPA
processes that were recently detailed by the Government Accountability
Office. 
MMS must remedy the serious oil spill response limitations that exist in
the Arctic.  
MMS must fill in critical gaps in knowledge about the Arctic ecosystem –
including information as basic as wildlife population baselines.   
In light of the current crisis, the Obama administration must act now to
cancel all plans for offshore drilling this summer and until they can
provide a more rational basis for determining when, where and if
development may be appropriate. 

Please ask Congressman Boswell to ask questions during the upcoming
Hearing as to the risks in our Arctic Ocean from Shell's exploratory
drilling.  

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