Title: Alaska, Oil, and Energy
1Alaska, Oil, and Energy
2An Energy Crisis?
- The Bush Administrations Energy Strategy Report
stated "America in the year 2001 faces the most
serious energy shortage since the oil embargoes
of the 1970's. - Gas prices today (April 05) at 2.50
- American imports over half of its oil
- Drilling for oil in Alaskas Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge is supposed to be an important
part of nations response to this crisis
3Questions explored
- Is opening up the Arctic Refuge a step in the
right direction for U.S. energy policy, for the
State of Alaska, and for the human and nonhuman
communities involved? - What do Alaskans think about drilling and why?
- Can there be environmentally-friendly drilling
for oil in the Refuge? - Are there better alternatives?
4Alaska is by far the largest state
- About 1/5 size of entire U.S.
- 375 million acres
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6Alaskas Wild Beauty
- Alaskas size, remoteness, mountains, glaciers,
and wildlife make it our countrys wilderness
treasure
7Denali
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9Portage Glacier
10Crow Pass and Raven Glacier
11History of Alaskan land and oil policy
- Alaska statehood in 1958
- State received right to select 104 million acres
- States rights were contingent on settling
Natives land claims - AK Natives claimed virtually all of AKs 375
million acres as their own
12Oil Discovery Led to Native Settlement
- 1968 oil discovered at Prudhoe Bay
- State wanted to build an 800 mile pipeline from
Prudhoe Bay to Valdez, bisecting the state - Native Alaskans land claims made it impossible
to get the needed rights of way
13Pict of AK
14- Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1970
- Natives got 44 million acres (12) of AK
- Included in ANCSA was a provision to withdraw 80
million acres for conservation lands
15Battle Over AK Pipeline
- 800 mile pipeline bisecting Americas last great
wilderness wasnt going to get build easily - Three env. groups (FOE, EDF, WS) and 5 Native
Alaska villages sued - In 1973, Congress resolved the suit by passing AK
pipeline authorization act - Senate vote was 49 to 49, Nixons V.P. Spiro
Agnew casting the tie breaking vote
16 Pipeline through AK
range
17Battle Over Alaska Conservation Lands
- How much of Alaska would be set aside in
conservation areas? - ANSCA deal was 80 million acres
- Mo Udall (Pres. Carters Sec. of Interior) wanted
123 million acres with 60 million in wilderness - AK Senator Stevens wanted 60 million acres with
12 million wilderness - Stalemate until Pres. Carter used Antiquities Act
to set aside 154 million acres in National
Monuments - AK went berserk
181980 Compromise
- Passage of the Alaska National Interests Lands
Conservation Act - President Carter signed just as he left office.
- 104 million acres of new conservation land in AK
with 50 million of that wilderness - This was a doubling of the total wilderness
acreage in the U.S. - Carter has said this was the most important
conservation legislation of 20th century
191989 Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
- 11 million gallons
- 53rd biggest spill
- 11,000 miles of coastline oiled (470 direct
miles SC to DC) - Devastated Prince William Sounds wildlife and
human communities - Destroyed subsistence way of life of local
people? - Huge wildlife losses (75 sea otters killed
loons still not recovered) - 20 of crude oil still was there 12 years later
20Animals affected by Exxon Valdez Spill
2122,000 carcasses of common murres found
2213,000 marbled murrelets killed
23Valdez Terminal
24Kenai oil tanker in Valdez
25Columbia glacier icebergs
26Bligh Reef
27Pipeline Club
28Tanker tied to tug
29History of Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
- Pres. Eisenhowerin response to a campaign of
Muries and Supreme Court Justice William O
Douglas set aside Refuge in 1960 - 19.8 million acres in north east AK, bordering
Canada (slightly larger SC) - 17.5 permanently off limits to development
(wilderness) - 1.5 million acre coastal plain (1002 area)
Congress can open for oil/gas development
30 Special Place?
- Defenders unique geography makes it a
wildlife/wildland treasure - Brooks Range swings to within 40 miles of coast,
range of arctic ecosystems in a small area - Interior Sec. Gale Norton has called it a flat
white nothingness - A Godforsaken mosquito-infested swamp shrouded
in frozen darkness ½ year
31U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says
- "The Arctic Refuge is among the most complete,
pristine, and undisturbed ecosystems on earth.
Here coastal lagoons, barrier islands, arctic
tundra, foothills, mountains, and boreal forests
provide a combination of habitats, climate, and
geography unmatched by any other northern
conservation area
32- "This unique compression of habitats concentrates
the occurrence of a wide variety of wildlife and
fish species.... In fact, according to FWS, the
Arctic Refuge coastal plain contains the greatest
wildlife diversity of any protected area above
the Arctic Circle."
33 Species in Refuge
- The area's large mammals also include grizzly
bears, polar bears, Dall sheep, wolves, moose,
and a herd of rare muskoxen. 135 species of birds
are known to use the 1002 area, including large
flocks of snow geese which feed on the area's
nutritious vegetation in the fall in preparation
for their long flight to their wintering grounds
in the Central Valley of California. Other animal
species of the area include shorebirds, loons,
songbirds, and raptors, as well as fish such as
the Arctic char and Arctic grayling.
34Caribou in Denali
35Arguments against ANWR drilling
- 95 of Alaskas Arctic Coastal plain is already
open to oil drilling - Prudhoe Bays poor env. record 400 oil spills a
year since 1996 - Large amounts of air pollution
- Only one EPA worker on North Slope
36How much oil in ANWR?
- USGS 1998 3.2 to 6.3 billion barrels (7-13
month U.S. supply) - Proponents say 10-16 billion barrels (2-3 year
supply) - USGS says 5 chance of 16 billion
37Conservation/Efficiency Alternative
- Enhancing energy efficiency in buildings and
industry could easily save us as much oil
38V.P. Dick Cheney
- Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue,
but it is not a sufficient basis for a sound,
comprehensive energy policy.
39Cheney on Conservation (continued)
- To think that we could simply conserve or ration
our way out of the energy crisis is 1970's era
thinking. - Supports energy efficiency only when it does not
reduce living standards or negatively impact U.S.
industry. - Opposes any energy conservation measures based on
the idea that Americans now live too well or
that people should do more with less.
40Fuel Economy Standards
(CAFÉ)
- Adopted in 1975, average rose from 14 to 27mpg by
mid 80s - No significance increases in CAFÉ since
- Because of the popularity of SUVs (only required
to average 20.7 mpg vs 27.5 for cars), in 2002
average U.S. fuel economy fell to its lowest
level since 1980 - China has proposed more stringent rules
- Raising CAFÉ from 27 to 40 mpg would save a
billion barrels a year
41Can there be Env. Friendly Drilling in ANWR?
- New drilling technologies cast doubt on the claim
that ANWR will be as devastated as Prudhoe Bay - Not clear that the Prudhoe Bay oilfields a
disaster for wildlife
42New Drilling Technology
- Small well pads with drills branching out 4-5
miles underground - 2000 acres of total disturbance out of 1.5
million acres? - Drilling mud, contaminated water, spilled oil,
and discarded chemicals formerly put in waste
pits can be ground into a slurry and pumped
underground - Gravel roads (mined from river beds) spread all
over fragile tundra can now be built from ice
that melts in spring - The maze of oil collecting pipelines can be
raised for animals to duck under and elevated
elbows lessen effects of spills
43Oil Pad
44 Ice Road
45Caribou under pipeline
46Bear on Pipeline
47New Survey Techniques
- The success rate raised from 1 producing well for
each 10 exploratory wells to 5 in 10. - Dynamite no longer used, but vibrating 10-ton
thumper trucks crisscross tundra in an
intensive way leaving scars disrupting wildlife - 2000 acre figure doesnt include this
48Thumper Truck
49Damage from Thumper Truck (in Utah)
501984 track from seismic exploration
51Same track in 1999 (15 years later)
52Critics Arent Impressed
- Once the work shifts from exploration to
extraction of oil, the result is always a sprawl
of pipelines, roads, crew quarters, and fuel
depots In the end, even with all this
technology, youve got a massive industrial
complex.
53Alaskas Oil Addiction
- 78 of state budget is funded by North Slope oil
revenue - Alaskans pay no state income or sales taxes
- Each Alaskan receives yearly check from state oil
revenues Typically it is 1000 to 2,000. - Oil from Prudhoe Bay is running out (From 19
billion barrels to 6.4 now) Pipeline flow down
50. - No wonder 75 of Alaskans support drilling in the
arctic.
54Natives perspective
- Inupiat Eskimos who live in ANWR next to 1002
support it 78 in Kaktovik - Own oil/gas rights in ANWR which cant be leased
unless ANWR opened up - Do not live a subsistence lifestyle but are part
of the modern cash economy - One of the USs wealthiest Native groups
- Oppose offshore oil development fearing it would
harm bowhead whale hunt important to their
cultural identity
55Inupiat Eskimos of Kaktovic
56Gwichin Indians oppose
- Fear it will harm Porcupine Caribou herd
- Dont live in ANWR but hunt caribou that migrate
there. - Live (mostly) a subsistence lifestyle Caribou
meat 80 of tribal diet - Ethic of hunters sharing caribou meat essential
to their culture - 1002 Sacred birthing ground of caribou and
ultimately of Gwichin people
57GwichinIndians
58Effects on Porcupine Caribou herd?
- 150,000 animals migrate to coastal plain in
summer for foraging, protection from predators
and insect, and to calve - Canadian estimate Drilling could cause 40
decline in birthrate - Central Artic herd near Prudhoe bay Thriving
(oil industry) or calving near Prudhoe Bay
nearly ceased(Canadians) - Porcupine herd has no where to move
59Caribou and Oil Rig
- One study Wildlife adapted well to oil
drilling.
60Tentative conclusions
- Should not risk cultural genocide
- Even environmentally-friendly oil development
would ruin the Arctic Refuges pristine character
61Should not risk cultural genocide
- Gwichin spokesperson Faith Gemmil Dont
sacrifice our way of life for short term economic
gain. - Some impact on Porcupine Herd likely but
probably not enough to undermine the Gwichin
subsistence hunt and way of life - But even a tiny chance of causing cultural
genocide should prevent drilling - Especially given our the history of our treatment
of Natives Americans
62Oil development would ruin the Arctic Refuges
pristine nature
- A significant part of the value of this place is
that it is untouched by modern human industrial
desire - The pristine, virginal character of places like
the Arctic Refuge are necessarily spoiled even by
environmentally careful petro development - Temporary McDonalds in Louvre?
- Sexual assault while sedated?
63Current politics of ANWR (April 2005)
- On March 18, Senate voted 51-49 to include
revenue from drilling in the Refuge in the
federal budget - This means that opponents of drilling cannot use
a filibuster to block oil development in the
Refuge - A filibuster can only be broken by 60 votes,
something drilling proponents dont have - Last year a federal budget was not passed, and so
drilling opponents have some hope this will occur
again - They also hope that the drilling provision will
be taken out of the budget in future votes
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65Alaska, Oil, and Energy