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Shell gets final permit to drill for oil in Arctic Ocean

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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The federal government on Monday gave Royal Dutch Shell the final permit it needs to drill for oil in the Arctic Ocean off Alaska's northwest coast for the first time in more than two decades.

The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement announced that it approved the permit to drill below the ocean floor after the oil giant brought in a required piece of equipment to stop a possible well blowout.

The agency previously allowed Shell to begin drilling only the top sections of two wells in the Chukchi Sea because the key equipment, called a capping stack, was stuck on a vessel that needed repair in Portland, Oregon.

Because the vessel arrived last week, Shell is free to drill into oil-bearing rock, estimated at 8,000 feet below the ocean floor, for the first time since its last exploratory well was drilled in 1991.

"Activities conducted offshore Alaska are being held to the highest safety, environmental protection, and emergency response standards," agency Director Brian Salerno said in a statement Monday. "We will continue to monitor their work around the clock to ensure the utmost safety and environmental stewardship."

The Polar Pioneer, a semi-submersible drilling unit that Shell leases from Transocean Ltd., began work July 30 at Shell's Burger J site. It completed what's called a mud-line cellar, a 20-by-40-foot hole at the top of the well that will hold a blowout preventer, and continued drilling into rock above the petroleum-bearing zone.

"It's possible we will complete a well this summer but we're not attaching a timeline to the number of feet drilled," Smith said.

Safe operations will determine progress, he said.

Environmental groups oppose Arctic offshore drilling, saying industrial activity will harm polar bears, Pacific walrus, ice seals and threatened whales already vulnerable from climate warming and shrinking summer sea ice. They say oil companies have not demonstrated that they can clean up a spill in water choked by ice.

Sierra Club executive director Michael Brune said in a statement that President Obama's decision to grant Shell the final drilling permits goes against science, the will of the people and common sense.


"Granting Shell the permit to drill in the Arctic was the wrong decision, and this fight is far from over," he said. "The people will continue to call on President Obama to protect the Arctic and our environment."

The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that U.S. Arctic waters hold 26 billion barrels of recoverable oil, and Shell is eager to explore in a basin that company officials say could be a game-changer for domestic production.

Shell bid $2.1 billion on Chukchi Sea leases in 2008 and has spent upward of $7 billion on exploration there and in the Beaufort Sea off Alaska's north coast.

Shell hopes to drill two exploration wells during the short 2015 open-water season. It has until late September, when all work must stop. It has two drill vessels and about 28 support vessels in the Chukchi Sea.

The permit to drill deep into the ocean hinged on the arrival of a capping stack, which is a roughly 30-foot device that can be lowered over a wellhead to act like a spigot to stop a blowout. The government requires Shell to have the device ready to use within 24 hours of a blowout.

The capping stack sits on a 380-foot icebreaker that suffered hull damage July 3 as it left Dutch Harbor, a port in the Aleutian Islands. The vessel named the Fennica was repaired in Portland, Oregon, and briefly delayed from leaving July 30 by Greenpeace protesters in climbing gear hanging from a bridge over the Willamette River.

The Fennica reached the drill site 70 miles off Alaska's northwest coast on Aug. 11.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-shell-arctic-oil-drilling-20150817-story.html
 
It's about time, if we keep drilling here at home and build some pipelines and get the oil away from the railroads we can get gas back to 25 cents a gallon.
 
Why do they want drill for more oil. The more they drill and more money they will lose. There is enough oil all ready. The world needs more refiners.
 
Sierra Club executive director Michael Brune said in a statement that President Obama's decision to grant Shell the final drilling permits goes against science, the will of the people and common sense.

"Granting Shell the permit to drill in the Arctic was the wrong decision, and this fight is far from over," he said. "The people will continue to call on President Obama to protect the Arctic and our environment."
I say we arm the Sierra Club.

Or maybe Greenpeace.

Or ELF.

This is war. Corporate America and their political puppets are on the wrong side.
 
The only way the US gets out of the middle east is to replace what they send to us in oil with as much domestic production as possible. I know it ain't what it used to be...but strategically, the less we import worldwide the better.

So, you let Shell drill.
 
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The federal government on Monday gave Royal Dutch Shell the final permit it needs to drill for oil in the Arctic Ocean off Alaska's northwest coast for the first time in more than two decades.

The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement announced that it approved the permit to drill below the ocean floor after the oil giant brought in a required piece of equipment to stop a possible well blowout.

The agency previously allowed Shell to begin drilling only the top sections of two wells in the Chukchi Sea because the key equipment, called a capping stack, was stuck on a vessel that needed repair in Portland, Oregon.

Because the vessel arrived last week, Shell is free to drill into oil-bearing rock, estimated at 8,000 feet below the ocean floor, for the first time since its last exploratory well was drilled in 1991.

"Activities conducted offshore Alaska are being held to the highest safety, environmental protection, and emergency response standards," agency Director Brian Salerno said in a statement Monday. "We will continue to monitor their work around the clock to ensure the utmost safety and environmental stewardship."

The Polar Pioneer, a semi-submersible drilling unit that Shell leases from Transocean Ltd., began work July 30 at Shell's Burger J site. It completed what's called a mud-line cellar, a 20-by-40-foot hole at the top of the well that will hold a blowout preventer, and continued drilling into rock above the petroleum-bearing zone.

"It's possible we will complete a well this summer but we're not attaching a timeline to the number of feet drilled," Smith said.

Safe operations will determine progress, he said.

Environmental groups oppose Arctic offshore drilling, saying industrial activity will harm polar bears, Pacific walrus, ice seals and threatened whales already vulnerable from climate warming and shrinking summer sea ice. They say oil companies have not demonstrated that they can clean up a spill in water choked by ice.

Sierra Club executive director Michael Brune said in a statement that President Obama's decision to grant Shell the final drilling permits goes against science, the will of the people and common sense.


"Granting Shell the permit to drill in the Arctic was the wrong decision, and this fight is far from over," he said. "The people will continue to call on President Obama to protect the Arctic and our environment."

The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that U.S. Arctic waters hold 26 billion barrels of recoverable oil, and Shell is eager to explore in a basin that company officials say could be a game-changer for domestic production.

Shell bid $2.1 billion on Chukchi Sea leases in 2008 and has spent upward of $7 billion on exploration there and in the Beaufort Sea off Alaska's north coast.

Shell hopes to drill two exploration wells during the short 2015 open-water season. It has until late September, when all work must stop. It has two drill vessels and about 28 support vessels in the Chukchi Sea.

The permit to drill deep into the ocean hinged on the arrival of a capping stack, which is a roughly 30-foot device that can be lowered over a wellhead to act like a spigot to stop a blowout. The government requires Shell to have the device ready to use within 24 hours of a blowout.

The capping stack sits on a 380-foot icebreaker that suffered hull damage July 3 as it left Dutch Harbor, a port in the Aleutian Islands. The vessel named the Fennica was repaired in Portland, Oregon, and briefly delayed from leaving July 30 by Greenpeace protesters in climbing gear hanging from a bridge over the Willamette River.

The Fennica reached the drill site 70 miles off Alaska's northwest coast on Aug. 11.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-shell-arctic-oil-drilling-20150817-story.html

Sierra Club is a bunch of wacko fools, more interested in self promotion than the environment.

Drilling is the most intelligent move.
 
In a rare disagreement with President Obama, Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday came out against drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic Ocean, one day after the White House granted approval for exploration off the coast of Alaska.

Mrs. Clinton, a Democratic presidential candidate who served in Mr. Obama’s cabinet as secretary of state, has largely stood by the president on policy matters since beginning her campaign this year. While she has remained silent on whether she would support the Keystone XL oil pipeline project, which Mr. Obama has under review and which environmentalists oppose, Arctic drilling was an opportunity for her to accommodate the progressive wing of her party.

“The Arctic is a unique treasure,” Mrs. Clinton wrote in a signed Twitter post. “Given what we know now, it’s not worth the risk of drilling.”

The Obama administration on Monday granted Shell a final permit to begin drilling in the waters of the Chukchi Sea off Alaska’s northwest coast. Oil companies have long sought the rights to explore the region, which scientists estimate could contain up to 15 billion barrels of oil.

But five years after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, environmentalists warn that drilling in the Arctic Ocean will accelerate global warming and that cleaning up a spill in those waters would be especially difficult. Shell acquired leases in 2008 under the George W. Bush administration to gain the rights to drill.

On Tuesday, environmental groups applauded Mrs. Clinton’s stance.

“She’s exactly right: Everything we know about dangerous oil drilling in the Arctic indicates it imperils a national treasure and is guaranteed to make our climate crisis worse,” said Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club.

Mrs. Clinton continues to face pressure to take a position on the Keystone pipeline. She has said she will remain silent on the issue until Mr. Obama makes a decision on the project’s future because she was involved during its early stages of discussion.

But questioned by reporters Tuesday in North Las Vegas, Nev., on why she has not expressed a position, she said she was getting impatient waiting for the administration to act “because I’m not comfortable saying, you know, I have to keep my opinion to myself given the fact that I was involved in it.”

Potential Republican rivals for the presidency seized on Mrs. Clinton’s announcement as an opportunity to express their support for drilling. Former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida said that Mrs. Clinton was “extreme” in her position.

But speaking in Nevada, Mrs. Clinton said Shell’s history of drilling difficulties raised red flags and that she had concluded after reviewing available data that the Arctic waters should be protected from exploration.

“I think we should not risk the potential catastrophes that could come about from accidents in looking for more oil in one of the few remaining pristine regions of the world,” she said. “Rather we should be focusing on clean renewable energy.”

Mr. Obama has said that Arctic drilling is an inevitability that needs to be carefully managed.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/19/u...atedCoverage&region=Marginalia&pgtype=article
 
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