GREENLines, Tuesday, April 7, 1999 from GREEN, NPRA OIL LEASES IMMINENT: The 4/6 Anchorage Daily News reported the Bureau of Land Management will offer oil drilling leases in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska on May 5th. Environmentalists are waging an ongoing campaign against a plan to open the 23-million-acre reserve that is also habitat to grizzlies, caribou and millions of migratory birds. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ From Jane Clark: Excerpts of an alert and letter I sent last September regarding this issue: PROTECT WILDERNESS IN ALASKA (Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt announced the plan to allow oil leasing and development in the National Petroleum Reserve (NPR-A) B Alaska several months ago.) This is a wilderness where five million ducks, geese, and shorebirds breed. Congress set aside this oil reserve in 1923 with the intention to keep it wild and free until the occurrence of a national energy crisis, in which case certain parts of it would be opened. It has remained untouched for the last 75 years. This little known wildland located to the west of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is the largest expanse of undeveloped public land left in America. Babbitt stated that he "tried to strike a balance between oil development and environmental protection." His decision proposes to open up 4 million acres of the reserve's 23 million acres to exploration. The decision not only gives the oil companies access to the reserve, but opens the door to future drilling in supposedly "protected" areas. The Arctic coastal plain does not recover quickly from man and machines. "This is no compromise between conservation and development", said Sylvia Ward, Executive Director of the Northern Center in Fairbanks, Alaska "Wilderness is precious and increasingly rare". Not one square inch of the Reserve is permanently protected from pipelines, roads, oil drilling, or pollution, yet millions of acres of wilderness and natural wildlife habitat are now condemned. "While this is a great deal for big oil companies, it puts in jeopardy many of Alaska's biological treasures, such as the wild caribou herds, numerous bird and fish species, moose and brown bears," said Sierra Club Conservation Director Bruce Hamilton. "There is no compelling case to be made for why we should sacrifice the unique wilderness and wildlife of this area. Oil is cheap and plentiful, and we need to be shifting away from fossil fuel development and burning, not opening up new areas for the oil industry to pillage. The Sierra Club believes all prime wildlife areas should be off limits to leasing. The basic assumption of needing to strike a balance should be challenged," he said. "There is no need to lease in this area at this time." Oil prices are currently the lowest in two decades. This pristine Arctic Wilderness should be a gift to future generations. It is time to make sure these internationally significant fish and wildlife habitats, wild rivers, and wild places get the permanent protection they deserve! The Arctic coastal plain does not, cannot, and will not recover quickly from man and his machines and the destruction that will occur on the coastal plain if Secretary Babbitt's decision is not reversed. Here in Iowa, one of only 6 states with no designated Wilderness Areas, we treasure wilderness as precious and increasingly rare. We feel that this compromise that Secretary Babbitt has proposed will be a loss to all Americans, putting in jeopardy many of Alaska's biological treasures. Jane Clark ----------------------------------------------------------------- To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send email to [log in to unmask] Make the message text (not the subject): SIGNOFF IOWA-TOPICS