These are the Facts: The Minerals Management Service, in approving Shell
Oil’s exploration plans for the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, did not deny the
remote possibility of disasters like the Gulf spill. It took the necessary “hard
look at the consequences of its actions” in approving the offshore drilling
plans in the Arctic, the court said.
Despite all allegations to the contrary,
a federal court has yet again confirmed that the federal government properly
reviewed oil exploration plans for this coming summer in Alaska’s offshore
waters. Thanks Mary for this letter showing Obama has not protected
pristine waters in the Arctic above the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge.
Thank you Mary! Phyllis
Spill should make us rethink Arctic
Drilling
I have been watching with horror
as one of the worst oil spills in American history continues unabated, and
millions of gallons of crude oil now threaten our nation's vital Gulf coast
ecosystem.
This latest national environmental crisis reaffirms the oil
industry's history of consistently underestimating the risks of
drilling.
In light of the crisis, President Barack Obama recently called
for a time-out on new offshore drilling, but didn't specifically include the
Arctic Ocean.
Despite
the fact that there is no way to clean up a major oil spill amid the Arctic's
broken sea-ice conditions, exploratory drilling is slated to begin in the Arctic
Ocean in less than 60 days.
If the oil industry can't even stop a spill
in the Gulf of Mexico, surrounded by all of its
infrastructure and technology, how will they ever stop one at the top of the
world?
- Mary Torgoman, Des
Moines
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