Alaska
Related: About this forumWhy the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge may not be drilled
Every summer, the Porcupine caribou herd travels hundreds of miles to return to the northernmost edge of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge on Alaskas North Slope. There, on the coastal plain known as Area 1002, the cows give birth to calves, and the animals forage for food and huddle together against the swarms of mosquitoes.
The caribou are protected, almost, by the 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, which granted federal protection to more than a quarter of Alaskas 375 million acres, including the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Most of the nearly 20-million-acre refuge was designated as wilderness, but the coastal plain was set aside for oil and gas development, if and when Congress approved it. Since then, politicians have batted the issue back and forth, neither fully protecting the region or opening it up. Last month, though, the Trump administration opened the entire 1.56 million acres of the 1002 for leasing, removing the last regulatory hurdle to the prospect of well pads, roads and pipelines in the calving grounds and setting the stage for the exploitation of one of the conservation movements most important sites.
The fate of the area, and the caribou that depend on it, is not yet sealed, however. Before drill rigs can move in, developers must overcome other legal and political challenges, along with an increasingly uncertain petroleum economy and the possibility of a new presidential administration.
The latest obstacle was thrown up on Sept. 9, when 15 state governments in the Lower 48 and three Alaska tribal entities south of the Refuge Native Village of Venetie Tribal Government, Arctic Village Council and Venetie Village Council all took separate legal action against the federal government to try to stop the lease sale. Thats in addition to other lawsuits filed last month by the Gwichin Steering Committee which advocates for 15 Gwichin communities in Alaska and Canada with 12 other environmental organizations, and another from a coalition of conservation groups. We used to migrate alongside (the caribou) for over 40,000 years, Bernadette Demientieff, executive director of the Steering Committee, said in an interview. We cant survive without them. The Gwichin Steering Committee was formed in 1988 in response to proposals to drill in the herds calving grounds. With the help of other conservation groups, the Gwichin managed to convince major banks including Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase to curtail or ban investment in fossil fuel projects in Alaska, a serious matter for an industry still reeling from low oil prices.
Read more: https://www.hcn.org/articles/north-oil-why-the-arctic-national-wildlife-refuge-may-not-be-drilled
(High Country News)
Thekaspervote
(34,653 posts)Too expensive, too little return, huge oil glut