This week Shell announced plans to abandon its Arctic oil drilling operations. This is huge.
From activists who scaled Shell’s rig in April or who stopped one of Shell’s ships this July, to the millions of people all over the world who signed petitions, paraded with polar bears, shared stories and helped organise for real environmental justice, this is YOUR victory. Thank you.
The cost of Arctic drilling
Shell claims that the amount of oil it has been able to find isn’t worth the high costs
of what has been one of the most dangerous and expensive projects in
the history of fossil fuel extraction (for both the company’s wallet and
reputation).
The company has already spent upwards of US$7 billion trying to find
oil in the Alaskan Arctic, but the environmental costs of Arctic oil are
even higher.
In the US, President Obama’s own administration estimates that there would be a 75 percent chance of a disastrous oil spill if Shell got what it originally wanted.
And it’s not just the risk of an oil spill that’s
alarming. The Arctic acts as the world’s air conditioner by reflecting
sunlight off sea ice and keeping the oceans cool. But that sea ice is
melting, and the region is heating up twice as fast as the rest of the
world.
Climate change in the Arctic is already leading to people being displaced from their homes, polar bears starving and mosquito swarms
getting so huge that they have become deadly for caribou. Drilling for
and burning more fossil fuels is the exact wrong response to climate
change.
Why Shell called it quits
Shell found evidence of oil in the Arctic, but it still decided not to drill. The Financial Times reports that Shell has privately admitted that it didn’t expect so much public opposition. And in Shell’s own statement
on why the company decided to abandon its Arctic drilling operations,
the company cites a “challenging regulatory environment” as one key
reason for halting its search for Arctic oil. You challenged them.
Shell was used to breezing through important
environmental regulatory processes without a scratch, but this time
people were watching. All year, comments poured in
to the US government from around the world as millions of people asked
President Obama’s administration to pull the brakes on Shell’s drilling.
It wasn’t President Obama who showed real climate leadership here. It was you.
Together, you turned what the oil industry hoped would
be a small business story into front page headlines. Together, we
demonstrated that people have the power to fight companies and
governments who consistently value corporate profits over the health of
our planet.
The fight isn’t over. While Shell has backed away from
the Arctic, the region still doesn’t have the protection it needs. We
will continue working to keep Shell and all other oil companies out of
the Arctic for good and to demand a global sanctuary in this fragile
region that will protect it from further destruction.
April Glaser is a mobilization specialist at Greenpeace USA.
A version of this blog was originally posted by Greenpeace USA.
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