likwid
04-29-2006, 09:02 AM
Everyone loves the scaley and fuzzy critters, otherwise we wouldn't have this sport along with others.
ANWR is just the start of the destruction.
Reproduced with permission of the Alaskan Wilderness League
Myth: The wildlife and wilderness of the Arctic Refuge coastal plain are not special.
Fact: The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is unique on the North Slope of Alaska and in the world. It is the only place in the nation where the full spectrum of arctic and sub-arctic ecosystems is protected in an unbroken continuum. It is known as "America's Serengeti" for the herd of 129,000 caribou that gather on the coastal plain to bear and nurse their young each year and for its concentrations of other migratory wildlife.
Fact: Unlike the Prudhoe Bay area, it is the nation's most important polar bear denning habitat on land, hosts up to 300,000 staging snow geese, and provides critical calving habitat for the international Porcupine caribou herd for which there is no alternative.
Myth: Oil and wilderness can coexist.
Fact: By definition, an industrial zone and wilderness cannot occupy the same space. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was established 40 years ago as just that -- a wildlife refuge-- not an oil drilling area. No matter how well done, oil exploration and development have significant and lasting impacts on the environment.
Fact: "We can't develop fields and keep wilderness," said ARCO's Ronnie Chappell. (Los Angeles Times, July 10, 1997, "Alaska's delicate Arctic awaits new push for crude.")
Myth: Less than 1% of the refuge would be affected, a fraction of the entire refuge.
Fact: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service considers the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain area the "biological heart" of the entire 19-million acre refuge. This area -- where the oil industry wants to drill -- is the center of wildlife activity in the refuge and its most productive area, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The coastal plain is a critical part of our nation's preeminent wilderness.
Fact: The Interior Department concluded in a 1987 (Reagan Administration) Report to Congress that oil development in the coastal plain would cause major impacts to the Porcupine caribou herd, muskoxen, water quality and quantity, subsistence uses by local residents, and wilderness.
Myth: The coastal plain “1002” area is not managed as a regular wildlife refuge.
Fact: The coastal plain was part of the Arctic National Wildlife Range established by President Eisenhower in 1960. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service never allowed oil leasing or drilling in the range. In 1980, Congress doubled its size, renamed it, and expanded its purposes to include conservation of natural diversity, supporting subsistence uses, maintaining international treaty obligations and preserving water quality and quantity. All of the original refuge was protected as wilderness by ANILCA, except the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain area.
Fact: The coastal plain is currently managed as an integral part of the Arctic Refuge. Although Section 1002 of ANILCA required a study of the oil potential through a one-time seismic exploration program, that special study was completed and sent to Congress in 1987. The reason why Congress explicitly prohibited oil leasing and development in the refuge in 1980 (by sec. 1003 of ANILCA) and withdrew the coastal plain from the mineral leasing laws was because it recognized that the coastal plain is unique and especially critical to the refuge wildlife. In fact, the House of Representatives had voted twice to designate the coastal plain as wilderness during the 1970’s Alaska Lands Act debates. The Senate was poised to do the when the bill was pulled from the floor and a final version was worked out in back room negotiations.
Myth: Only 14% of the whole North Slope is open to oil exploration.
Fact: The Arctic Refuge is the only area on Alaska's North Slope where oil exploration and development is prohibited by law. Nearly 95% of the North Slope’s arctic coastal and foothills tundra is available to the oil industry for exploration or development.
Fact: Senator Murkowski claims "the Federal lands are not open," but this disregards leasing history. On the Federal Outer Continental Shelf in the Beaufort Sea tens of millions of acres have been leased since 1979 and numerous sales were held in the 23 million-acre National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPRA) during the 1980's. The Interior Department held a new NPRA lease in 1999. It offered 87 percent of the Northeast planning area's 4.6 million acres for oil and gas leasing. British Petroleum, Phillips and other companies now have 133 leases in the NPRA. Phillips drilled a number of oil wells there during early 2000 and BP plans to drill 8 wells in the next five years. While the remaining acreage in the Teshekpuk Lake area of NPRA was deferred from leasing, seismic oil exploration continues to be allowed there. Arctic Power, a pro-drilling group, erroneously maps the shoreline in this area closed to exploration and their claim that only 14% of the North Slope is open to exploration bases its calculation on shoreline miles, not the entire area.
Myth: The "footprint" of development will be only 2000 acres, smaller than Dulles airport, due to advanced technology that continues to improve.
Fact: No matter how well done, oil development will industrialize a unique, wild area that is the biological heart of the refuge.
Fact: The Interior Department estimated that 12,500 acres would be directly impacted in a web of roads, drill pads, processing facilities and airports extending over hundreds of square miles, not in a compact area. (Dulles airport has 13,000 acres but only 350 acres of this is under concrete or gravel).
Fact: The entire 1.5 million acre coastal plain area would be opened to oil leasing under Senator Murkowki’s legislation. Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies conclude that potential oil resources are located in many small accumulations in complex geological formation, instead of in one giant field like Prudhoe Bay. It is more likely that oil development would spread over a large region connected by roads, pipelines, power plants, processing plants, airports, gravel mines, powerlines, and other infrastructure.
Fact: Although technological advances have reduced the size of individual drilling pads, the North Slope oil fields continue to sprawl across America's Arctic with new roads, pipelines, drill sites and production facilities constructed each year.
Fact: Infrastructure from Prudhoe Bay and 18 other producing oil fields and the Trans-Alaska Pipeline have directly affected about 22,000 acres of tundra wetlands. But the industrial complex extends across more than 1,000 square miles of the North Slope-- the size of the state of Rhode Island.
Fact: Decreased caribou densities within a zone 4 km of pipelines and roads show that the "extent of avoidance greatly exceeds the physical "footprint" of an oil-field complex," according to caribou biologists (Nellemann and Cameron 1998).
Fact: Noise, air and water pollution, noise, wildlife disturbance and other impacts of oil exploration and development would extend well beyond the sites where direct habitat loss occurs.
Fact: "The visible effects of drilling may be best described by ARCO's Ronnie Chappell, who says that even a state-of-the art operation in the Arctic will still look like a 'small industrial site'." (Audubon, December 1997).
Myth: The small footprint from Endicott exemplifies technological improvements of newer oil fields.
Fact: Even at newer oil fields like Endicott there have been significant problems with environmental management. In February 2000, BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc. was sentenced to pay $15.5 million in criminal fines and to implement a new environmental management program, and to serve 5-years probation for failure to report illegal dumping of hazardous wastes down Endicott oil wells. BP also paid $6.5 million in civil penalties. Its contractor pled guilty to 15 counts of violating the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 and paid a $3 million fine. Over a period of three years, the drilling company had dumped wastes containing benzene and other toxic substances down well shafts, which ended only after a whistleblower came forward. In six years of chairing the Energy and Resources Committees, Alaska Senator Frank Murkwoski and Representative Don Young have not held a single oversight hearing on the oil industry’s environmental abuses at Endicott, elsewhere on the North Slope, on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, or in Prince William Sound.
ANWR is just the start of the destruction.
Reproduced with permission of the Alaskan Wilderness League
Myth: The wildlife and wilderness of the Arctic Refuge coastal plain are not special.
Fact: The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is unique on the North Slope of Alaska and in the world. It is the only place in the nation where the full spectrum of arctic and sub-arctic ecosystems is protected in an unbroken continuum. It is known as "America's Serengeti" for the herd of 129,000 caribou that gather on the coastal plain to bear and nurse their young each year and for its concentrations of other migratory wildlife.
Fact: Unlike the Prudhoe Bay area, it is the nation's most important polar bear denning habitat on land, hosts up to 300,000 staging snow geese, and provides critical calving habitat for the international Porcupine caribou herd for which there is no alternative.
Myth: Oil and wilderness can coexist.
Fact: By definition, an industrial zone and wilderness cannot occupy the same space. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was established 40 years ago as just that -- a wildlife refuge-- not an oil drilling area. No matter how well done, oil exploration and development have significant and lasting impacts on the environment.
Fact: "We can't develop fields and keep wilderness," said ARCO's Ronnie Chappell. (Los Angeles Times, July 10, 1997, "Alaska's delicate Arctic awaits new push for crude.")
Myth: Less than 1% of the refuge would be affected, a fraction of the entire refuge.
Fact: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service considers the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain area the "biological heart" of the entire 19-million acre refuge. This area -- where the oil industry wants to drill -- is the center of wildlife activity in the refuge and its most productive area, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The coastal plain is a critical part of our nation's preeminent wilderness.
Fact: The Interior Department concluded in a 1987 (Reagan Administration) Report to Congress that oil development in the coastal plain would cause major impacts to the Porcupine caribou herd, muskoxen, water quality and quantity, subsistence uses by local residents, and wilderness.
Myth: The coastal plain “1002” area is not managed as a regular wildlife refuge.
Fact: The coastal plain was part of the Arctic National Wildlife Range established by President Eisenhower in 1960. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service never allowed oil leasing or drilling in the range. In 1980, Congress doubled its size, renamed it, and expanded its purposes to include conservation of natural diversity, supporting subsistence uses, maintaining international treaty obligations and preserving water quality and quantity. All of the original refuge was protected as wilderness by ANILCA, except the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain area.
Fact: The coastal plain is currently managed as an integral part of the Arctic Refuge. Although Section 1002 of ANILCA required a study of the oil potential through a one-time seismic exploration program, that special study was completed and sent to Congress in 1987. The reason why Congress explicitly prohibited oil leasing and development in the refuge in 1980 (by sec. 1003 of ANILCA) and withdrew the coastal plain from the mineral leasing laws was because it recognized that the coastal plain is unique and especially critical to the refuge wildlife. In fact, the House of Representatives had voted twice to designate the coastal plain as wilderness during the 1970’s Alaska Lands Act debates. The Senate was poised to do the when the bill was pulled from the floor and a final version was worked out in back room negotiations.
Myth: Only 14% of the whole North Slope is open to oil exploration.
Fact: The Arctic Refuge is the only area on Alaska's North Slope where oil exploration and development is prohibited by law. Nearly 95% of the North Slope’s arctic coastal and foothills tundra is available to the oil industry for exploration or development.
Fact: Senator Murkowski claims "the Federal lands are not open," but this disregards leasing history. On the Federal Outer Continental Shelf in the Beaufort Sea tens of millions of acres have been leased since 1979 and numerous sales were held in the 23 million-acre National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPRA) during the 1980's. The Interior Department held a new NPRA lease in 1999. It offered 87 percent of the Northeast planning area's 4.6 million acres for oil and gas leasing. British Petroleum, Phillips and other companies now have 133 leases in the NPRA. Phillips drilled a number of oil wells there during early 2000 and BP plans to drill 8 wells in the next five years. While the remaining acreage in the Teshekpuk Lake area of NPRA was deferred from leasing, seismic oil exploration continues to be allowed there. Arctic Power, a pro-drilling group, erroneously maps the shoreline in this area closed to exploration and their claim that only 14% of the North Slope is open to exploration bases its calculation on shoreline miles, not the entire area.
Myth: The "footprint" of development will be only 2000 acres, smaller than Dulles airport, due to advanced technology that continues to improve.
Fact: No matter how well done, oil development will industrialize a unique, wild area that is the biological heart of the refuge.
Fact: The Interior Department estimated that 12,500 acres would be directly impacted in a web of roads, drill pads, processing facilities and airports extending over hundreds of square miles, not in a compact area. (Dulles airport has 13,000 acres but only 350 acres of this is under concrete or gravel).
Fact: The entire 1.5 million acre coastal plain area would be opened to oil leasing under Senator Murkowki’s legislation. Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies conclude that potential oil resources are located in many small accumulations in complex geological formation, instead of in one giant field like Prudhoe Bay. It is more likely that oil development would spread over a large region connected by roads, pipelines, power plants, processing plants, airports, gravel mines, powerlines, and other infrastructure.
Fact: Although technological advances have reduced the size of individual drilling pads, the North Slope oil fields continue to sprawl across America's Arctic with new roads, pipelines, drill sites and production facilities constructed each year.
Fact: Infrastructure from Prudhoe Bay and 18 other producing oil fields and the Trans-Alaska Pipeline have directly affected about 22,000 acres of tundra wetlands. But the industrial complex extends across more than 1,000 square miles of the North Slope-- the size of the state of Rhode Island.
Fact: Decreased caribou densities within a zone 4 km of pipelines and roads show that the "extent of avoidance greatly exceeds the physical "footprint" of an oil-field complex," according to caribou biologists (Nellemann and Cameron 1998).
Fact: Noise, air and water pollution, noise, wildlife disturbance and other impacts of oil exploration and development would extend well beyond the sites where direct habitat loss occurs.
Fact: "The visible effects of drilling may be best described by ARCO's Ronnie Chappell, who says that even a state-of-the art operation in the Arctic will still look like a 'small industrial site'." (Audubon, December 1997).
Myth: The small footprint from Endicott exemplifies technological improvements of newer oil fields.
Fact: Even at newer oil fields like Endicott there have been significant problems with environmental management. In February 2000, BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc. was sentenced to pay $15.5 million in criminal fines and to implement a new environmental management program, and to serve 5-years probation for failure to report illegal dumping of hazardous wastes down Endicott oil wells. BP also paid $6.5 million in civil penalties. Its contractor pled guilty to 15 counts of violating the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 and paid a $3 million fine. Over a period of three years, the drilling company had dumped wastes containing benzene and other toxic substances down well shafts, which ended only after a whistleblower came forward. In six years of chairing the Energy and Resources Committees, Alaska Senator Frank Murkwoski and Representative Don Young have not held a single oversight hearing on the oil industry’s environmental abuses at Endicott, elsewhere on the North Slope, on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, or in Prince William Sound.