“What’s more important: polar bears or another decade of oil?...“It’s hard to know how people will react when presented with this choice.”
I'm picking that they'll opt for the oil
Alaska
Hunts Oil as Arctic Damage Shows Most Change From Climate
3
October, 2013
When Jerry Otto started hunting for Alaskan oil in 1980, his tractor-trailers barreled along ice roads as much as 10 feet thick for 180 days every year.
Then
in January, in a twist that embodies the perplexing reality of life
and commerce amid a changing global climate, the temperature dropped
suddenly to minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 40 degrees Celsius),
encasing drilling-rig components in ice as Otto waited for roads to
solidify to ship the gear to Linc sites.
After
thawing the equipment with blowtorches, he discovered that the cold
was decreasing oil flowing into Linc’s well. With 200 workers
standing by, the company lost $300,000 a day with each delay, ending
2012 with a $61 million deficit..
Otto
plans to try again in December, this time drilling sideways into a
hill to get underneath 1,000 feet (300 meters) of permafrost and up
into reservoirs he says hold 1.2 billion barrels of light, sweet
crude.
“It’s
getting more unpredictable,” says Otto, 59, who runs Brisbane-based
Linc’s drilling rig in Umiat, Alaska, which is within the National
Petroleum Reserve that President Warren G. Harding created in 1923 to
guarantee oil for the Navy.
“We’re
in a race against Mother Nature. If we don’t get cold weather early
enough, or if it gets too warm too fast in the spring, it could stall
the project.”
Collapsing
Cliffs
Otto
and others already braving the extremes of a region where sunlight
disappears for 60 days a year are experiencing a new phenomenon:
daily life navigating the risks and opportunities of climate change.
The
Arctic has heated up twice as fast as the rest of the planet in the
past three decades. By August 2013, sea ice had lost 76 percent of
its volume compared to 1979, according to the University of
Washington’s Polar Ice Center. Citing core samples taken from ice
sheets, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United
Nations group, reported on Sept. 27 that the three main gases blamed
for global warming --carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide -- are
at their highest level in at least 800,000 years.
On
Alaska’s Arctic coast, 30-foot-high cliffs that haven’t budged
since the last ice age are tumbling into the ocean overnight and
village coastlines are eroding, leaving residents in peril.
Lightning-sparked forest fires have charred more than 1 million acres
(405,000 hectares) in five of the past 10 years. By midcentury, the
average area burned by wildfires each year is likely to double, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says.
Alaskan
Laboratory
Heat
waves are getting hotter and longer, and winters are producing more
rain and less snow as the carbon-damaged atmosphere soaks up
moisture, says Rick Thoman, a climate analyst for the National
Weather Service in Fairbanks, Alaska.
“Alaskans
are living through climate change in ways people have not experienced
in many thousands of years,” he says. “Alaska is a laboratory for
everybody in the sense that this is the kind of thing you can expect
in your region down the road.”
Alaska,
with just 731,449 residents in 2012, is at the forefront of a global
challenge: How do individuals, companies and investors measure the
costs -- and, yes, the economic benefits -- of a changing climate? In
Alaska, the calculation starts with fossil fuels, the energy sources
the United Nations’ IPCC says are heating the atmosphere.
Targeting
2050
Most
scientists agree that human-produced carbon dioxide contributes to
climate change, says William Reilly, a retired ConocoPhillips (COP)
director and former EPA head.
As
for oil-industry executives, “I don’t know a single CEO of a
major company who doesn’t expect carbon regulation in our future,”
Reilly says.
Even
if carbon is taxed, oilmen will still heed consumer demands for
energy, making Alaska’s offshore reserves too big to ignore, he
predicts.
Robert
Blaauw, Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA)’s senior Arctic adviser, says
his company is interested in the Arctic not for today but for 2050 --
when power use will have doubled and two-thirds of energy will still
come from fossil fuels.
“Shell
and the other majors will continue their search for Arctic oil and
gas,” Blaauw says.
On
Sept. 24, ConocoPhillips announced the first-ever federally approved
test of unmanned drone aircraft for commercial purposes in the U.S.
Drones could be used to monitor ice floes and marine mammal
migrations in the Arctic, ConocoPhillips said.
Another
Prudhoe?
The
oil and gas industry generates 30 percent of Alaska’s personal
income and provides about 90 percent of the revenue that runs the
state government each year. But the Prudhoe Bay field, which has
powered the Alaskan economy since 1977, is so old that it’s
producing at just 26 percent of peak output.
Oil
drillers are seizing a fresh opportunity: As receding summer ice
exposes previously unreachable oil under the sea, Statoil ASA (STL),
Shell and others are buying drilling rights to technically
recoverable deposits that the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
says could total 23.6 billion barrels.
The
original Prudhoe Bay field held 25 billion barrels, 13 billion of
which were considered recoverable, according to a 2006 BP Plc (BP/)
fact sheet.
Opponents
say Alaska is precipitating its own decline by chasing fossil fuels.
“Continuing
to spew carbon into the atmosphere is only making climate change
worse,” says Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources
Defense Council. “The Arctic is where you can see that more clearly
than anywhere.”
Polar
Bears
Alaskans
from the quarter-mile-wide village of Kivalina to the commercial
center of Anchorage are taking stands on climate-change trade-offs
for everything from petroleum extraction to wildlife migration.
“What’s
more important: polar bears or another decade of oil?” asks Raymond
Pierrehumbert, a University of Chicago climate scientist, referring
to the animals facing starvation because the sea ice from which they
hunt seals is disappearing.
“It’s
hard to know how people will react when presented with this choice.”
Richard
Glenn wants his state to reap the benefits of more oil drilling.
Glenn is executive vice president for land and resources for Arctic
Slope Regional Corp., a Native Alaskan-owned company to which the
U.S. Congress gave land and mineral rights in a 1971 settlement. ASRC
generates $2.5 billion in annual revenue from refining and other
businesses and pays dividends to 11,000 Native Alaskan shareholders.
‘Time
Bomb’
Glenn
lives in Barrow, which enjoys running water, sewers and a health
clinic. He says his city has these necessities because the Prudhoe
Bay oil field brings the town revenue as part of the North Slope
Borough’s taxing authority.
Barrow
artist Vernon Rexford opposes offshore drilling because he says it
threatens native lifestyles.
“Offshore
drilling directly infringes on our ability to continue as Eskimo
people with subsistence living,” he says. “It’s a time bomb
waiting to activate.”
John
Moran of the National Marine Fisheries Service is assessing the
pluses and minuses of climate change at 10 p.m. on an August Saturday
in Barrow, with the sky still bright from the sun just below the
horizon.
Standing
in the Arctic Ocean in khaki waders, Moran launches a
remote-controlled boat that tracks how cod and salmon are faring in
waters that are getting warmer and more acidic.
‘Winners,
Losers’
“There
will be winners and losers,” he says. “There are lots of
variables we don’t understand.”
Shipping
and vacation cruises are enjoying a boom with climbing temperatures.
Yet the heat is melting glaciers and may force wildlife to flee north
from national parks, potentially damaging the state’s $1.8 billion
tourism industry.
The
Red Dog mine in Kotzebue in northern Alaska is experiencing more
ice-free days, expanding the weeks it can ship zinc and lead. With
longer summers, the mine stockpiles less of its cache, cutting costs.
Vancouver’s Teck Resources Ltd. (TCK/B), which runs the mine, may
be able to open new deposits nearby, says Reggie Joule, mayor of the
Northwest Arctic Borough based in Kotzebue.
BHP
Billiton Ltd. (BHP), meanwhile, is struggling with climate change.
The world’s largest mining company applied for an exploration
permit for 2 billion tons of low-sulfur coal near Point Lay in
Alaska’s northwestern corner in 2010. The coal, most of which lies
under ASRC-owned land, can’t be loaded directly onto ships because
the area is a breeding ground for threatened diving ducks called
Stellar’s eiders.
Palm
Leaves
Under
the Endangered Species Act of 1973, BHP can’t significantly modify
the ecosystem without federal approval. The eiders feed on clams, and
warming seas are preventing the mollusks from getting nutrients, says
Jacqueline Grebmeier, a University of Maryland biologist.
BHP
may instead move the coal overland 150 miles (240 kilometers) to ship
it, adding to costs and environmental risks.
Linc
is proceeding at Umiat in spite of increasingly soggy tundra and
hotter summers.
Otto
says he knows the climate is shifting because he wrestles every
drilling season with pulpy permafrost. He also remembers drilling for
oil in Prudhoe Bay
in 1995. Back then, his drill bits brought up palm
leaves and redwood trunks, which he says are remnants of a time when
Alaska’s north coast was a tropical swamp.
“Some
people say that what we’re seeing could be a natural variation;
others say no, it’s the emissions,” Otto says. “I came away
with mixed ideas.”
White
Cliffs
Employees
preparing the Umiat site on a 70-degree-Fahrenheit August day step
off the drilling pad and sink to their ankles in the water, moss and
lichens of the tundra. The Colville River flows past Umiat Mountain,
which rises like the white cliffs of Dover. Blue and white shipping
containers are bolted together for storage and living space. An old
Navy airstrip operates in summer for the only access.
Linc
endures the conditions because oil prices make the hardships worth
it, says Scott Broussard, Linc’s president of oil and gas. Global
oil sold for $109.12 a barrel on Oct. 2, up from a low of $9.55 15
years earlier.
To
provide more reasons to drill, the state in May enacted $1.1 billion
a year in tax credits and other incentives for such oil and gas
companies as Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM), ConocoPhillips, Linc and Shell.
Migrating
Caribou
Broussard
says Linc plans to invest $1.3 billion in Umiat, 75 percent of which
will come from state inducements. He’d like to start production in
2018 and ship 50,000 barrels a day as Linc races against ever-shorter
seasons.
“All
the easy oil is gone,” Broussard says. “That’s why we’re in
Umiat.”
More
hurdles are looming. The company wants to build a gravel road and an
80,000-barrel-a-day underground pipeline to ship oil 109 miles east
to the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System. Alaska needs permanent
thoroughfares because climate change is likely to trim the ice-road
season further, says Joe Balash, deputy director of the state’s
Department of Natural Resources.
Eighty
miles south, the 350 Native Alaskans who live in Anaktuvuk Pass in
the foothills of the snow-capped Brooks Range mostly oppose a
permanent road. The route could disrupt caribou migration, says
lifelong resident Jerry Sikvayugak. In 2007, a fire burned 401 square
miles (1,039 square kilometers), hindering the animals’ journey and
depleting residents’ food supplies.
Broussard
says Linc has met with the village’s inhabitants and hopes to find
an acceptable pathway.
Shell’s
Armada
“Climate
change could cost us trillions of dollars, but we’ll also see new
industries grow,” says Mark Begich, Alaska’s Democratic U.S.
senator.
He
says that by investing in wind, geothermal and solar power, Alaska
plans to surpass all other states and rely on renewables for 50
percent of its energy needs in 2025, up from 27 percent this year.
Shell
learned how volatile Alaska’s climate can be in October 2012. It
sent an armada of 22 ships to the northern coast to begin searching
for oil. First, a patch of ocean the size of Pennsylvania froze in 48
hours, forcing the company to delay drilling for two weeks. After
that, a drilling rig broke free and ran aground in heavy surf.
Shell
has canceled drilling for 2013 and has made no announcement about
2014. With its Alaskan drilling on hold, Shell in April added its
name to a parade of companies eyeing the Arctic Ocean north of
Russia. It agreed to study joining OAO Gazprom, already the world’s
biggest natural gas producer, in an offshore drilling program for
oil.
Cruise
Ships
In
Nome, on Alaska’s western coast, Mayor Denise Michels is looking to
capitalize on shipping now that melting ice has opened the sea for
longer summers.
Dockings
in Nome harbor grew to 430 in 2012 from 30 in 1988, forcing vessels
to tie up three abreast. Some 200,000 cruise ship passengers planned
to visit the Arctic this year, and retirees may rush to Alaska as
temperatures rise and water dwindles in such parched U.S. cities as
Phoenix, says Fran Ulmer, chairman of the U.S. Arctic Research
Commission.
Commercial
shipping to Europe is growing in the Bering Strait via the Northern
Sea Route along Russia’s coast. Permits for sailing in the area
skyrocketed to 556 this year from four in 2010.
‘New
Species’
Michels
recognizes the impacts of the shipping bonanza. She says Nome would
be overwhelmed by a maritime disaster. In 2010, 128 passengers were
stranded for two days when cruise ship MV Clipper Adventurer struck
an uncharted rock in the Canadian Arctic.
Michels
expects more noise and says routine discharges of bilge water may
contain pollutants and invasive species.
“You
have to adapt,” she says of climate change. “You plan for more
storms, more often. You watch roads and buildings sink into the
permafrost as it melts. You watch as new species arrive -- insects,
fish, crabs, vegetation -- and watch the impact they have on animals
that have been here forever and on which we depend.”
The
400 residents of Kivalina, a barrier island about 300 miles north of
Nome, are nervously preparing for the winter as rising seas erode
their coastline.
‘Freaking
Out’
Storms
are more violent on land because there’s less sea ice to slow them.
Stan Hawley, the tribal council administrator, says bad weather has
washed human excrement from the island’s landfill into a lagoon
used for drinking water and closed the airport, trapping residents.
“The
elders are unsettled, watching the waves,” Hawley, 51, says. “The
kids are freaking out.”
Kivalina
was a fishing camp until the Bureau of Indian Affairs built a school
in 1905. Today, it’s half its width of 30 years ago. Weather-beaten
houses on stilts sit near tanks holding fuel delivered once a year by
barge.
Kivalinians
survive in part by floating on ice to hunt whales. The U.S.
government allows subsistence hunting by Native Alaskans as long as
the catch doesn’t threaten the herd. Rising temperatures are making
that harder.
“The
ice is too thin and moves too fast,” Hawley says. “We used to
camp out there for weeks as we hunted. Now, it’s a few days.”
Glenn,
the ASRC official, says he’s happy to work to combat climate change
-- but not without better understanding the effects on the
environment, and not if it means blocking development and the
improvements oil revenue will bring.
World’s
Guilt
“To
assuage the guilt of the world, we’d be telling this community to
stay the way you were,” he says of native peoples. “In the whole
history of the human race, not one generation has been willing to
say: ‘I want to turn back. I want my life to be harder.’”
When
he worked for the North Slope Borough, Glenn rebuilt a Navy gas field
south of Barrow -- the only place where Native Alaskans control the
extraction of hydrocarbons.
“When
you turn the stove on, it’s a good feeling that the gas is coming
from the local community, without ever going through a pipeline,”
he says.
At
ASRC, Glenn is advocating a road leading due north from Umiat,
avoiding Anaktuvuk Pass, to help develop his company’s oil deposits
west of Prudhoe Bay.
“There
are organizations who want to stop all hydrocarbon development in the
Arctic in the name of stopping or slowing down climate change,” he
says. “It isn’t going to change the trend the world is
experiencing. They’d just open up the valve a little wider in Saudi
Arabia or somewhere else.”
As
for the state’s warming environment, Glenn says Alaskans are used
to change: They experience extremes like few others.
“We
roll with the punches as ice comes and goes every year,” he says.
“And we’ll roll with the punches of a changing climate.”
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