Department Of The Interior Releases Final Supplemental EIS For Chukchi Sea Lease Sale 193
Analysis confirms major risks from oil drilling in the remote and fragile Arctic Ocean
On February 12, the Department of the Interior released its final supplemental environmental impact statement for Chukchi Sea Lease Sale 193, less than two months after hundreds of thousands of public comments called its previous draft analysis flawed. The EIS isn’t the agency’s final decision about whether to end or affirm the Chukchi Sea oil leases, and Interior can still get it right. But it is a notable rushed stride toward potential environmental harm.
Walruses sighted in the Chukchi Sea during a tagging survey in June 2010.
“The lease sale decision is a golden opportunity for the Obama administration to show leadership by deciding to keep the Chukchi Sea off limits to drilling,” said Earthjustice Staff Attorney Erik Grafe. “But Interior’s publication of the supplemental EIS for the Chukchi Sea lease today is a step in the wrong direction. The Interior is rushing through the process to cater to Shell’s drilling wishes rather than sound decision-making about an irreplaceable region already under dramatic climate stress.”
Earthjustice and other environmental groups are calling for the department to take additional time to fully inform the public about the risks of oil drilling in the Chukchi.
“Today’s impact statement confirms again that drilling in the Chukchi Sea puts Arctic people and wildlife at risk from major oil spills,” Grafe said. “It concludes there is a 75 percent chance of one or more major oil spills if the Chukchi Sea is developed, and there is no way to clean or contain such a spill. Drilling for oil in the Arctic Ocean also would exacerbate climate change, adding climate insult to climate injury. The administration should end the leases.”
The final draft does not appear to fix the problems identified in the initial draft, and rather further highlights the dangers of drilling in the region to its landscape, wildlife, and people.
Source: Earthjustice
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