The U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS)
will hold its first federal Outer Continental
Shelf oil and gas
lease sale since 1991 on February 6. It is leasing nearly 46,000 square
miles in the Chukchi Sea off the northwest coast of Alaska, with
estimated conventional reserves of 15 billion barrels of oil. Waters
within 25 miles of the coast are excluded from the lease area. This
announcement comes just six days before the January 9 deadline for the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to decide whether to list the polar bear
as endangered
because of the global-warming induced decline of Arctic sea
ice,
some of which covers the Chukchi Sea.
The MMS believes that environmental concerns
will be sufficiently addressed by its
stipulations,
which do not consider the effects of climate change:
The sale area will not include nearshore waters ranging from about 25
to 50 miles from the coast, which includes the near-shore “polynya”
through which the bowhead and beluga whales, other marine mammals, and
marine birds migrate north in the spring, and in which local
communities subsistence hunt. Leases issued from the sale will include
stipulations to address environmental effects that may occur because
of exploration and development of the area’s oil and gas resources.
These stipulations call for protection of biological resources,
including protected marine mammals and birds and methods to minimize
interference with subsistence hunting and other subsistence harvesting
activities.
Environmental organizations are livid. The World Wildlife Fund
published a series of
statements
from Alaska Wilderness League, Center for Biological Diversity, Audubon,
and indigenous activists condemning the threat to the polar bear and
other marine life from the planned sale.
In the fine
print of
its final notice of
sale,
the MMS does note:
Lessees are advised that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is
proposing to list the polar bear (Ursus maritimus) as a threatened
species under the Endangered Species Act and has initiated a
comprehensive scientific review to assess the current status and
future of the species. The FWS anticipates
making a decision in early 2008 on whether to list polar bears under
the ESA. Please refer to
http://alaska.fws.gov/fisheries/mmm/polarbear/issues.htm for
additional information. If the polar bears are ultimately listed under
the ESA, then MMS
will consult with FWS under Section 7 of the
ESA, and may be required to apply additional
mitigation measures on OCS activities to
ensure appropriate protection.
Update: Sierra Club has launched a letter-writing
campaign
to “chill the drills” in what it calls the “Polar Bear Seas”.