OTHER URGENT ACTION/
PRESS RELEASES

 

For Immediate Release
January 31, 2008

Contact:


Jack Schaefer, Native Village of Point Hope, 907-368-2235
Steve Oomittuk, City of Point Hope, 907-368-2537
George Edwardson, ICAS, 907-852-3746
Faith Gemmill, Redoil, 907-750-0188

Native Groups Sue MMS Over Chukchi Sea Lease Sale
Elders Resolution Prompts Region-wide


Lawsuit Point Hope, AK – Today the Native Village of Point Hope, the City of Point Hope, the Inupiat Community of the Arctic Slope (ICAS), and the Resisting Environmental Destruction on Indigenous Lands (REDOIL) Network filed a lawsuit to fight the Chukchi Sea Lease Sale 193. Minerals Management Service (MMS) plans to hold the lease sale on February 6, 2008.

The Point Hope Elders Advisory Council, the traditional Inupiat leaders of the Native Village of Point Hope, a federally recognized tribal government, recently passed a resolution supporting a legal challenge to prevent offshore oil and gas activities in the Chukchi Sea.

“We support a legal challenge to MMS for holding Lease Sale 193 and we encourage others to follow us. As the traditional leaders of Point Hope, we ask all Inupiaq people to join us in our opposition to leasing the Chukchi Sea to oil and gas exploration and development. Help us protect our garden and the way of life we all share,” said David U. Stone, Sr., President of the Point Hope Elders Advisory Council.

The City of Point Hope, the municipal government for the community established in 1966, has joined the lawsuit.

“The people of TIKIGAQ [traditional name for the people of Point Hope] have hunted and depended on the animals that migrate through the Chukchi Sea for thousands of years. This is our garden, our identity, our livelihood,” said Steve Oomittuk, Point Hope City Mayor. Without it we would not be who we are today. Even at this present day and time the animals from these waters shelter, clothe, and feed us. We would be greatly impacted if anything happened to our ocean and the animals that migrate through the Chukchi Sea. We oppose any activity that will endanger our way of life and the animals that we greatly depend on,” said Oomittuk.

The approximately 30 million acres of the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Chukchi Sea 193 lease area include core habitat for polar bear and Pacific walrus, and encompasses the migration route of the bowhead whale, which the Inupiaq people of the North Slope have subsisted on for thousands of years.

North Slope residents are frustrated that MMS has ignored their concerns through government to government consultation and other public meetings. They believe litigation is the only choice still available to them to avoid oil and gas leasing in the Chukchi Sea and hopes other Inupiat will also file suit.

“The Inupiat Community of the Arctic Slope is the regional tribal government for eight villages on the North Slope. We have a responsibility to our people to stand up against threats to our whaling culture and to protect our way of life. An oil spill in the Chukchi Sea could devastate the bowhead whale migration and other animals we have subsisted on for thousands of years. MMS continues to ignore our concerns. The elders have spoken and told us to fight this and we will do so through this lawsuit,” said George Edwardson, President of the Inupiat Community of the Arctic Slope (ICAS).

The REDOIL Network is an Alaska Native grassroots organization with members of the Inupiat, Yupik, Aleut, Tlingit, Gwich’in, Eyak and Dena’ina Athabascan tribes, that resists unsustainable fossil fuel development.

“The REDOIL Network has joined in the lawsuit to support the Inupiat and their subsistence rights which are threatened by proposed offshore development in the Chukchi Sea. The Inupiat right to continue their way of life as they have for generations should be upheld in this decision instead of being compromised for multi-national oil company profits” said Faith Gemmill, REDOIL Campaign Organizer.

“We’ve hunted and fished in the ocean since time immemorial. We have always believed that we own the ocean and that it is our garden. We can’t afford to stop our religious, cultural and subsistence activities that depend on the ocean. The ocean is what our history and upon which our culture are based,” said Jack Schaefer, President of the Native Village of Point Hope.

The Alaska Native organizations are being represented by Earthjustice, a nonprofit environmental law firm in Juneau, Alaska. Several conservation groups have joined the Alaska Natives in their lawsuit.

printable as .pdf .doc


DRAFT—January 15, 2008, K.Westra

CONSERVATION, NATIVE GROUPS OPPOSE PROPOSED LAND SWAP
FOR OIL DEVELOPMENT IN YUKON FLATS REFUGE IN ALASKA
Groups Blast USFWS for Failing to Protect Wilderness, Native Values   .doc

 



 

9/13/2007
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Whit Sheard, Pacific Environment, 907-745-4077
Betsy Beardsley, Alaska Wilderness League, 907-830-0184
Faith Gemmill, REDOIL, 907-750-0188
Brendan Cummings, Center for Biological Diversity, 951-768-8301
Deirdre McDonnell, Earthjustice 907-586-2751


9th Circuit Court of Appeals Denies Shell Oil Request to Reconsider Ban on Oil Exploration in Alaska’s Beaufort Sea

San Francisco, CA – Today, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reaffirmed an August ruling blocking plans by Shell Offshore Inc. to drill for oil in the Beaufort Sea off the north coast of Alaska. In July and again in August, the Appeals Court issued orders suspending Shell’s exploration plan based on challenges that the plan risks to polar bears and endangered whales. Today's order rejects a request by Shell Offshore Inc. that the Court reconsider its previous rulings. The Court has stopped activity under the three year exploration plan until it can resolve the challenges to the plan and has put the case on a fast track.

A coalition of Native Alaskans and conservation groups had sued to halt the drilling on concerns that such large-scale industrial activities would threaten endangered bowhead whales, polar bears and other marine animals in coastal waters just off the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The groups challenged the permit issued by the federal Mineral Management Service on grounds that the agency failed to conduct proper assessment of environmental impacts.

The August 14th court order that Shell had asked the Court to reconsider concludes that groups challenging the exploration plan approval “have shown a probability of success on the merits” and “the balance of hardships tips sharply in their favor.”

Noise from exploration activities this fall would disturb bowhead whale migration and feeding in the Beaufort. Also at risk from disturbance and potential oil spills are polar bears and a variety of other animals, including the threatened Steller’s and spectacled eiders.

“The costs of drilling in the Beaufort Sea will lay with the local communities of the North Slope. The negative effects to our subsistence way of life will be seen on a daily basis - negative impacts to our quality of life and human and ecological health; therefore, today’s decision is heartening” commented Rosemary Ahtuangaruk, an Inupiat resident of Nuiqsut, a community near the proposed Shell lease area, and member of Resisting Environmental Destruction on Indigenous Lands (Redoil).

“The agency’s own scientists have warned that this type of activity could threaten serious impacts to bowhead whale mothers with calves,” said Betsy Beardsley, Alaska Wilderness League.

In addition to endangered bowhead whales, the drilling plan threatens polar bears, beluga whales and the coast of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Robert Thompson, Kaktovik resident and REDOIL member states: “It is a relief that the activities proposed by Shell Oil in the Arctic have been stopped. Shell Oil consistently has not answered our questions. Can oil be cleaned up in the Arctic Ocean if spilled? Our questions about oil toxicity and methods of clean up in broken ice and under ice conditions have also never been answered. Offshore drilling plans and Arctic Refuge development are interrelated issues. It is my hope that the ocean and the land will be saved for future generations of Inupiat.”

Polar bears are at particular risk as their habitat melts away due to global warming. This month Arctic sea ice reached a record low while government scientists released a report predicting polar bears will be extinct in Alaska by mid-century if warming trends continue.

“If polar bears are to survive as the Arctic melts in the face of global warming, we need to protect their critical habitat, not turn it into a polluted industrial zone,” said Brendan Cummings of the Center for Biological Diversity.

Shell had been granted permission by the MMS to drill as many as four wells this year, some just offshore from the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, an area kept off-limits to major mineral exploration despite continued efforts of the Bush administration to open it up to such activities.

“The court's 'time out' should send a message to the federal government that they can't continue to rubber stamp risky drilling operations in the Arctic Ocean,” said Whit Sheard, Alaska Program Director for Pacific Environment. “This is yet another reason to revisit MMS' reckless decision to sell off over 70 million acres of the Arctic Ocean to oil companies.”

Groups challenging the permit are the Alaska Wilderness League, Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council, Pacific Environment, Center for Biological Diversity, and Resisting Environmental Destruction on Indigenous Lands (Redoil) and are represented by Earthjustice. The North Slope Borough and Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission have also challenged the drilling plan.

 

 

 

RED OIL
Contact Us:
Faith Gemmill
Campaign Organizer


Resisting Environmental Destruction on Indigenous Lands

P.O. Box 74667
Fairbanks, AK 99701
PH: 907-456-2181
Fax: 907-456-2184
Email:
redoil1@acsalaska.net
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