Pacific black brant geese with goslings. Photo:
Birds, caribou, and oil companies will share vast Alaskan wilderness. 鈥淸It鈥檚] a victory for birds, wildlife, and America鈥檚 future,鈥 爆料公社 president and CEO David Yarnold said of the first-ever management plan for the 22.8 million acre reserve in northern Alaska. 鈥淚t says that some places really are too precious to drill.鈥
Today Interior Secretary Ken Salazar , which puts in place wildlife protections and also allows oil development in the .
Conservationists applauded the move.
鈥淭his plan fulfills the congressional intent for the reserve by protecting vital wildlife, waterfowl, and fish habitat; safeguarding subsistence opportunities; and allowing for extraction of the majority of the area鈥檚 oil,鈥 Joshua Reichert, who leads the The Pew Charitable Trusts鈥 environmental work, said in a statement. 鈥淚t is a model for sustainably managing our Arctic resources, both onshore and off.鈥
Some of important wildlife habitat will be protected. That includes coastal areas where walruses haul out, stretches of tundra that are critical birthing grounds for caribou, and Teshekpuk Lake and surrounding wetlands鈥攚here hundreds of thousands of birds from five contents nest each summer, including tens of thousands of molting snow, cackling, greater white-fronted, and Canada geese, and up to one-third of the world鈥檚 Pacific black brants, nearly 40,000 individuals. The plan will also help safeguard vulnerable species such as the spectacled eider and yellow-billed loon. ( for a slideshow of gorgeous images from the area.)
The 11.8 million acres that will be open for development are estimated to hold 549 million barrels of economically recoverable oil and 8.7 trillion cubic feet of economically recoverable natural gas.
鈥淏y protecting 11 million acres of Arctic wetlands and wildlife nurseries, this decision proves that sound energy policy and conservation can go hand in hand,鈥 said Yarnold. 鈥淎nd not only that, they must.鈥