podesta-emails
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.@Shell's move to halt offshore oil exploration is great news for the
climate, the Arctic oceans & the fragile wildlife that calls them home
(140)
I think it's probably not necessary to include a link in the tweet, because
the news is big, but here's the story:
Royal Dutch Shell suspends Arctic drilling indefinitelyBy Juliet Eilperin
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/juliet-eilperin> and Steven Mufson
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/steven-mufson> September 28 at 11:10
AM
<[email protected];[email protected]?subject=Reader%20feedback%20for%20%27Royal%20Dutch%20Shell%20suspends%20Arctic%20drilling%20indefinitely%27>
Demonstrators protest against Royal Dutch Shell near the Polar Pioneer oil
drilling rig on May 16, 2015, in Seattle. (David Ryder/Getty Images)
Royal Dutch Shell announced early Monday morning it will suspend Arctic
drilling
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/pondering-impact-of-drilling-off-remote-northwest-alaska/2011/07/21/gIQAvup6JJ_story.html>
indefinitely,
after finding insufficient oil and gas in one of its exploratory wells to
justify costly development.
The move puts the end — for now — on the contentious debate over whether
oil and gas exploration should take place in the environmentally sensitive
area off Alaska’s coast. President Obama has come under intense fire for
allowing drilling to proceed, and environmentalists cheered
Shell’s announcement.
It also highlights the tremendous costs and risks of drilling in the Arctic
frontier, which is thought to have vast oil reserves but where little
exploration has taken place so far.
In a statement at 1 a.m. Eastern time, Shell said that while it had
successfully drilled its Burger J exploration well in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea
this summer to a total depth of 6,800 feet, the indications of oil and gas
“are not sufficient to warrant further exploration in the Burger prospect.”
The well lies roughly 150 miles from Barrow, Alaska.
“The Shell Alaska team has operated safely and exceptionally well in every
aspect of this year’s exploration program,” said Shell Oil Co.’s president
Marvin Odum. “Shell continues to see important exploration potential in
the basin, and the area is likely to ultimately be of strategic importance
to Alaska and the U.S. However, this is a clearly disappointing exploration
outcome for this part of the basin.”
The firm said it would seal and abandon the well in accordance with U.S.
regulations and “will now cease further exploration activity in offshore
Alaska for the foreseeable future.”
“This decision reflects both the Burger J well result, the high costs
associated with the project, and the challenging and unpredictable federal
regulatory environment in offshore Alaska,” the statement added.
Interior Department spokeswoman Jessica Kershaw said Monday the department
“has focused on making sure that Shell’s exploration activities are
performed as safely as possible” and would continue to monitor its
activities as it scaled back its operations “to ensure that de-mobilization
activities are done safely and responsibly.”
The company said it would take a large financial charge as a result of the
announcement. The balance sheet value of Shell’s Alaska position is
approximately $3.0 billion, with approximately a further $1.1 billion of
future contractual commitments for equipment the company expected to use in
2016 and 2017, the company said. It will try to redeploy some of those
assets, but some write offs will be required.
Shell has spent more than $7 billion on oil exploration in the Alaskan
Arctic, including more than $2 billion in what was a record Interior
Department lease sale in 2008 and $1.4 billion this year. But its efforts
to find a vast amount of oil have been mired in lawsuits and a regulatory
process complicated by a series of mishaps — such as hitting uncharted
shoals — that have damaged vessels required for the drilling program. The
BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico also resulted in a suspension of all
offshore drilling for a period and made regulators more sensitive to spill
risks.
Lois Epstein, a licensed engineer and Arctic program director for the
Wilderness Society, said the project made no sense given the area’s
wildlife, lack of an oil spill response infrastructure and the threat
fossil fuel burning poses to the climate.
“Shell’s announcement is a very good news for the marine environment,
sensitive coastal lands and the Arctic communities that would be devastated
by a major oil spill,” Epstein said in a statement. “Hopefully, this means
that we are done with oil companies gambling with the Arctic Ocean, and we
can celebrate the news that the Arctic Ocean will be safe for the
foreseeable future.”
For the oil industry, however, the well results were bad news.
“That was a huge disappointment not only for Shell but also for the
industry,” said Fadel Gheit, an oil analyst for Oppenheimer & Co. “This has
been a saga. Bad timing, bad planning, bad circumstances. It was not meant
to be. Everything that could go wrong went wrong.”
He said that though the company only completed one well, he said that it
was the best prospect Shell had. “If you wanted to make a bet on one horse,
this was the horse in for the money,” he said. “This was the best
candidate.” In the 1990s, five wells were drilled in the area and
abandoned after yielding natural gas, but by early 2008 oil prices had
soared and Shell had taken another look at the seismic data.
The announcement that Shell would halt drilling came less than a month
after President Obama’s historic trip to the Alaskan Arctic to highlight
climate change and Arctic policy. Environmental activists had both
celebrated the trip and yet also suggested a contradiction between the
president’s climate concern on the one hand, and his administration’s
allowing Shell’s drilling plans to go forward.
“As President Obama saw first-hand, there are many challenges in the Arctic
region, and we can use this opportunity to address changing climate and the
need to protect and conserve important ocean resources,” said Susan Murray,
a deputy vice president at Oceana, in a statement. “Shell’s announcement
today allows the government to take a step back to apply
careful planning, precaution, and science to forge a sustainable future for
the Arctic.”
“Today’s announcement from Shell that it will not drill for oil in the
Arctic Ocean for the foreseeable future underscores the reality that
drilling in this harsh and sensitive Alaskan environment is not worth the
risk,” Sen. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) said in a statement Monday.
But Rex A. Rock, Sr., president of the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation
(ASRC), a consortium of Alaska Native companies that recently invested in
Shell’s oil prospects, said in a statement that he was “deeply
disappointed” with the news from Shell. The leaders of ASRC said they had
invested in Shell’s venture because of concerns that climate change would
make it more difficult to sustain their traditional whaling and fishing
based economy.
“We are looking for solutions on how we continue to sustain our local
economies to support our communities,” Rock said. “Absent any responsible
resource development onshore and offshore, we are facing a fiscal crisis
beyond measure.”
On Mon, Sep 28, 2015 at 12:40 PM, John Podesta <[email protected]>
wrote:
> I missed the Shell news, but worth finding and tweeting
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: "David Hayes" <[email protected]>
> Date: Sep 28, 2015 11:10 AM
> Subject: Shell and the Arctic
> To: "Peter Ogden" <[email protected]>, "Trevor Houser" <
> [email protected]>, "Ben Kobren" <[email protected]>, "Jake
> Sullivan" <[email protected]>, "John Podesta" <
> [email protected]>
> Cc:
>
> Shell's dry hole in the Chukchi obviously is huge and welcome news.
>
> Perhaps the best part of this is that the Bush-era leases in the Chukchi
> and Beaufort Seas that were purchased for $2+ billion in 2006 are now
> likely to expire before any new finds are confirmed. As a result, a future
> Administration should avoid the need to spend billions to buy out
> leasholders' interests in order to prevent future Arctic offshore drilling.
>
> (You may recall that in the Clinton Administration, there was a buy-out of
> existing leases in Bristol Bay; that was the only way to ensure that those
> leases would not be developed.)
>
>
>
> --
>
> *David J. Hayes*
>
> *Stanford Law School*
> Distinguished Visiting Lecturer in Law
>
> Crown Quadrangle
>
> 559 Nathan Abbott Way
>
> Stanford, CA 94305-8610
>
> *[email protected] <[email protected]>*
>
> twitter: @djhayes01
>
> office: 650-723-7778
>
> cell: 202-258-3909
>
> personal email: [email protected]
>
--
Milia Fisher
Special Assistant to the Chair
Hillary for America
[email protected]
c: 858.395.1741
ℹ️ Document Details
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