Clean Energy Can Power Our Economy and Protect the Arctic Ocean from Shell Oil

Shell Oil recently announced plans to resume drilling operations in the Arctic Ocean this summer. The company suffered a string of failures when it tried to drill there last year, from having its emergency equipment “crushed like a beer can” in tests to grounding its drill rig in a winter storm. But these fiascoes haven’t stopped Shell. The company is determined to gamble with our pristine ocean waters once again.

Yet even as the oil giant draws up drilling plans, the Arctic continues to feel the brunt of climate change. Last year the extent of sea ice in the Arctic hit the lowest on record—just half the average coverage of recent decades. This year was slightly better, but scientists say the trend of shrinking ice will amplify global warming and contribute to changing weather patterns already threatening communities in the United States and around the world from New York to the Philippines.

America doesn’t need to trash the Arctic Ocean. We don’t need to make climate change worse with more dirty fuels. We have safer, cleaner ways to power our economy. And we have the wisdom to recognize that some places are too special to drill.

Our nation is already embracing innovations that strengthen energy security and preserve our natural heritage at the same time. Last year, the U.S. raised fuel efficiency standards for new cars to 54.5 miles per gallon—on average—by 2025. That’s about double the mileage our cars get today. These standards will save consumers $1.7 trillion at the gas pump and reduce our oil imports by one-third. They will also cut in half the amount of global warming pollution coming from new cars.   

Similar gains in efficiency have helped slash our fossil fuel use across the economy.  In fact, efficiency has done more to meet America’s growing energy needs in the last 40 years than oil, gas, and nuclear combined. It is our fastest growing energy resource, and together with our enormous stores of wind, solar, and other renewable power, it represents the energy future. The U.S. has the ability to rely 100 percent on clean energy, and NRDC is committed to reaching that goal as soon as possible.

This is the path forward for our nation. But if we continue to sacrifice our communities and wild places by drilling for fuels that cause climate change, we will find ourselves in a dead end.

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Photo credit: Steve Hillebrand / USFWS

This summer I stood on the coast of the Chukchi Sea, where Shell plans to drill, and marveled at its wild shoreline, sculpted ice, and enormous northern sky. I knew that underneath the surface, the sea was teeming with life. Shellfish thrive along the long shallow floor, creating a smorgasbord for walrus, seals, and gray whales. Roughly half of America’s polar bears live off the Chukchi.

As I looked out to sea, I tried to imagine what would happen in the event of an oil spill. When I served on the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, I saw how the industry struggled to respond to a spill in the Gulf of Mexico. A spill in the Arctic would far more challenging. Oil would be trapped under ice for months, and the nearest back-up supply of response gear is 2,000 miles away. No oil company is a match for these remote and rugged conditions.

The Arctic is the last wild ocean we have left, and it is already suffering more from climate change than any other region on the planet. We should safeguard it, not compromise it further with drill rigs and carbon pollution. NRDC is fighting to block Shell from drilling so we can keep these Arctic waters wild and pristine, and we are calling on the Obama Administration to scrap plans to offer more oil and gas leases in the Chukchi Sea.

And at the same time, we continue to expand the energy solutions that already clean up our air, put Americans to work, and reduce the threat of climate change. You can join the effort by going to NRDC’s new site DemandCleanPower.org. Together, we can build the clean energy future.

 

 

Photo credit: Steve Hillebrand, US Fish & WIldlife Service