Offshore Oil and Gas Leasing in Lower Cook Inlet is back on the table. Sign the letter below by October 13 asking BOEM to protect the communities, ecosystems, economies and endangered species of the Cook Inlet Region.
James Kendall, Chief, BOEM, Alaska Region
3801 Centerpoint Drive, Suite 500,
Anchorage, Alaska 99503
RE: Comments on the Call for Information and Nominations for Proposed Lease Sale 258 in the Cook Inlet Planning Area.
james.kendall@boem.gov
Dear Mr. Kendall:
We the undersigned strongly urge BOEM to ensure the health of Cook Inlet and the communities who depend on it, now and in the future. Cook Inlet is a vast and vital ecosystem that has provided subsistence resources to Native Alaskans since about 500 A.D. and continues to sustain the residents of this region. Damages caused by poor management will be felt from Kodiak to Anchorage and will likely be irreversible. We urge the greatest caution as you consider oil and gas leasing in the dangerous and extremely difficult conditions of Lower Cook Inlet. We ask that you do not underestimate the tides, storms, ice, sediment, and dynamic conditions of our home. We implore you to take every precaution to prevent disasters and ban practices that will leave us without the ability to make a living from the wild resources we all love and depend on.
At a minimum our communities need:
The premise of the lease-sales appears to be fundamentally flawed. The economic premise used to justify the lease sale as in the “national interest” must be carefully reviewed in light of the best available information. BOEM’s assumption that offshore oil and gas development in the Lower Cook Inlet is the best way to “enhance the energy security of the United States” is not a given and there are a number of reasons why that may not be the case, especially when risks to essential habitats and climate impacts are factored in. A direct comparison of the costs and benefits of oil and gas vs. wind resource development is needed to assure the agency’s fulfillment of its mission to “manage development of U.S. Outer Continental Shelf energy and mineral resources in an environmentally and economically responsible way.” Offshore wind development—over a period of 40 to 70 years—in the region needs to be one of the alternatives assessed. This is particularly pressing at a time when the price of oil is hovering around $40/barrel and when regional natural gas and electricity costs have been rising for over 20 years. We do not need more oil. We need a more diversified grid.
As a point of reference, one analysis for the Atlantic coast estimated that the energy created by 20 years of offshore wind in the Atlantic could produce the equivalent of five billion barrels of oil—more than that of all the economically recoverable oil and gas in the same area. On top of that, Oceana estimates that for the next 20 years on the Atlantic Coast, offshore wind could create about 91,000 more jobs than offshore drilling, which is about double the job creation potential.
The National Center for Atmospheric Research has named shallower portions of the Lower Cook and Gulf Coast as some of the best potential locations for offshore wind in Alaska, due to the excellent wind resources available, as well as their proximity to population centers and existing Alaska Grid transmission lines.
Why would this region or our nation want to risk the unique natural resources of Lower Cook Inlet when there are better energy resources with a brighter future available to us?
All five species of Pacific salmon are harvested commercially in Cook Inlet. Commercial fisheries for halibut, groundfish, herring, and razor clams also occur in lower Cook Inlet and Kamishak Bay. Personal use fishing, an important source of food for many Alaskans, is prevalent in the area. Sport fishing is a major economic driver for residents in the Sale Area, adding more than $1 trillion of economic output most years.
The visitor industry is one of Alaska’s major economic drivers and, overall, the Southcentral region receives the highest economic impact from visitors. Estimated overall total visitor spending in the state in October 2014 to September 2015 was $1.94 billion.
When preparing the Environmental Impact Statement for the proposed Lease Sale 258, please consider the issues listed below for all phases of exploration, development, production and abandonment:
Additionally, based on the location of the lease sales, impact analyses for the potential industrialization of Homer, Seldovia, Port Grahm, Anchor Point, and the west side of the Inlet is necessary. This analysis must include cumulative impacts to water resources, essential habitat for fishes, and harm to the existing tourism and fishing industries, net population impacts, as well as impacts to subsistence practices of residents, especially Alaska Native Tribal Members. In all these analyses, please consider that most of our natural systems are already under strain due to a warming climate and increased population pressure.
We cannot repeat mistakes and lessons learned from past problems with oil and gas extraction. Any plan for oil and gas development in the Lower Inlet must include comprehensive monitoring to ensure that the ecosystems of Cook Inlet and all the people who depend on them now and in the future will be safeguarded from harm. Please review the following gaps in information and address them directly in the EIS:
Please carefully review and address point by point the above as well as all the other research needs and information gaps listed in “Assessment of nearshore communities and habitats: Lower Cook Inlet Nearshore Ecosystem 2015-2018,” Cook Inlet Physical Oceanography Workshop Proceedings, as well as NOAA’s 1977 Environmental Assessment. It is essential that BOEM act responsibly when issuing permits; BOEM must work with other agencies to fill in the gaps in knowledge cited in these documents in a timely manner.