Arctic Ocean

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KEY FACTS
  • American's Arctic Ocean: Beaufort & Chukchi Seas.
  • Most Recent Protection: In January 2016, President Barack Obama designated portions of the Chukchi and Beaufort seas off-limits to future oil and gas leasing via permanent withdrawals (9.8 million acres in 2015 and 115 million acres in 2016).
  • Drilling Threats: The proposed 2019-2024 5-Year National OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program for offshore drilling includes three lease sales each in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas; directional drilling into federal waters from current leases in the Beaufort Sea.
  • Climate Change Impacts: The Arctic is warming at twice the rate of the rest of the world, leading to melting sea ice and global sea level rise.
  • Risk: According to the federal government, the risk of a major oil spill in the Arctic Ocean could be as high as 75%.
  • Wildlife: The Arctic Ocean is home to walrus, whales, birds, seals and the entire population of U.S. polar bears.

America's Arctic Ocean, the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, is home to polar bears, bowhead whales, walrus and many other iconic marine animals. Yet oil and gas development remains a threat to these waters despite a serious lack of scientific understanding of the region and no credible means for cleaning up an oil spill in the Arctic's harsh and remote conditions. America’s Arctic is ground zero for the devastating impacts of climate change – warming at twice the rate of the rest of the world – and offshore drilling will only exacerbate the problem.

The administration's proposed 2019–2024 National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Draft Proposed Program includes future leasing in the Arctic Ocean, 125 million acres of which the Obama administration protected in 2015 and 2016 as ecologically sensitive marine environments. It calls for 47 lease sales across the country, with 19 off the coast of Alaska including six between the Beaufort and Chukchi seas. President Trump signed an executive order seeking to undo President Obama’s use of authority under Section 12(a) of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) to withdraw much of America’s Arctic Ocean (all of the Chukchi Sea and much of the Beaufort Sea) and portions of the Atlantic Ocean from leasing. The Trump administration is barreling forward with regulatory rollbacks and offshore leasing instead of maintaining the publicly-supported and scientifically sound protections for America's Arctic Ocean. We must continue to protect all of our coasts from new offshore oil and gas development. Please see below for relevant legislation, talking points, fact sheets, and more on what we're doing to defend the Arctic Ocean.

Fact Sheets | Congressional Letters | Maps | Research & Reports


Recent Legislative Activity


Talking Points

  • Arctic communities, scientists, and a majority of Americans recognize that Arctic drilling is too risky and too dirty to allow. We must defend the 125 million acres protected in total by administrative actions in 2015 and 2016, not move towards opening them for development including through the current draft Trump 2019-2022 5-year oil and gas leasing program.
  • The risk of an oil spill is proven and it is significant – if oil spills, it will be a disaster. As we’ve seen from the Deepwater Horizon and Exxon Valdez spills, there is no such thing as an effective clean up: once oil has been spilled, the battle has been lost. In the Arctic, the Department of the Interior’s own assessment found that there was a 75% chance of an oil spill of greater than 1,000 barrels with just the Chukchi Sea leases sold under the Bush administration.
  • The Arctic is ground zero for the devastating impacts of climate change – warming at twice the rate of the rest of the world. Oil and gas reserves in the Arctic Ocean amount to 23.6 billion barrelsand have the potential to release 15.8 billion tons of carbon if exploited – an amount equivalent to the emissions from all U.S. transportation modes for nearly a decade. Sea ice is declining, permafrost is melting and coastlines are eroding, and in order to avoid exacerbating these problems, Arctic Ocean oil must remain right where it is.

Fact Sheets

Congressional Letters

Maps

Research & Reports