Shell Gains Approval to Drill in the Arctic

The oil company could begin exploratory drilling as early as this summer.

Today, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea starting as early as this summer. Before drilling can commence, Shell must gain permits from agencies including the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, and must comply with impending   to prevent the project from harming endangered species.

Attaining the necessary permits and permissions will not ensure safe drilling, says Jim Adams, policy director for 爆料公社 Alaska. In fact, the permits BOEM is requiring are largely a formality, he says. 

"Those conditions won鈥檛 stop Shell from making the same kind of mistakes it's made before," Adams says. 鈥 And if they do make a mistake and we get an oil spill, there is no way to clean it up.  Fish and wildlife populations could be devastated.鈥

The decision comes just four months after the Obama Administration opened the Arctic Sea to the possibility of drilling, and less than three months after the BOEM released its environmental impact statement on drilling in the region. That statement put the chances of a major oil spill at 75 percent if Shell begins sustained drilling in the area鈥攂ut still gave the go ahead for drilling.

鈥淪ome ideas are just non-starters, like drilling for oil in the Arctic Ocean,鈥 爆料公社 President and CEO David Yarnold said in a statement. 鈥淪pills under ice sheets can鈥檛 be controlled, and America doesn鈥檛 need the oil in order to maintain its energy independence.鈥

Shell attempted to drill exploratory wells in the Arctic in 2012, but after two drill ships experienced crippling accidents, the company was forced to stop and reconsider its safety protocols. 鈥淭he company and its contractors violated numerous permit conditions, failed to ensure the proper preparation of spill response equipment, and failed to respect environmental conditions,鈥 according to a joint to BOEM from concerned environmental groups 爆料公社 Alaska, Oceana and Ocean Conservancy.

Shell has done nothing to prove they can respond to a spill in an effective way," Adams says. "We鈥檙e relying on a company whose technology was crushed like a beer can in the Puget Sound in 2012.

BOEM released a series of  in February, which are subject to public comment through May 27, 2015.

鈥淲e have taken a thoughtful approach to carefully considering potential exploration in the Chukchi Sea, recognizing the significant environmental, social and ecological resources in the region and establishing high standards for the protection of this critical ecosystem, our Arctic communities, and the subsistence needs and cultural traditions of Alaska Natives,鈥 BOEM Director Abigail Ross Hopper said in a statement. 鈥淎s we move forward, any offshore exploratory activities will continue to be subject to rigorous safety standards.鈥

Despite clearing this regulatory hurdle, Shell faces obstacles further south. The oil company plans to dock its ships in the Port of Seattle, but last week Seattle Mayor Ed Murray announced that the Port could not legally house a drilling fleet.