Posted on 01/09/2013 5:05:02 AM PST by thackney
The Obama administration ordered a broad review of Shells Arctic drilling program on Tuesday, following a series of mishaps that culminated with the grounding of the companys Kulluk rig on New Years Eve.
The move calls into question whether Shell Oil Co. will be allowed to continue its hunt for crude under the Chukchi and Beaufort seas north of Alaska, after spending $5 billion and more than six years on the quest.
In announcing the probe, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar stressed that the Obama administration is fully committed to exploring for potential in energy resources in frontier areas, such as the Arctic.
But some analysts suggested the inquiry nevertheless could mark a shift in the administrations support for a new generation of Arctic oil exploration, possibly affecting plans by ConocoPhillips, Statoil and other companies to drill in the region.
Shells Kulluk conical drilling unit collided with the rocky shore of Alaska Sitkalidak Island on Dec. 31, following a five-day battle to tow the unpropelled rig to safe harbor amid 70-mph winds and waves that climbed four-stories high. Shell had been towing the 266-foot floating rig to a Seattle shipyard two months after it finished boring the first half of an exploratory oil well in the Beaufort Sea. On Monday, salvage teams successfully pulled it to sheltered Kiliuda Bay for further assessments, and on Tuesday, they were planning to send remote-operated vehicles underwater to examine its hull.
The Interior Department said the expedited, high-level assessment of Shells 2012 Arctic drilling program is expected to be completed within 60 days. Officials said the probe would focus on the Kulluk accident as well as other challenges during Shells 2012 Arctic program, including the drillship Noble Discoverers out-of-control drift near Dutch Harbor, Alaska, last July, and the failure of Shells one-of-a-kind oil spill containment system during a deployment drill last September.
Salazar noted that Arctic oil exploration helps pinpoint the true scope of U.S. energy resources in the region. But, he added, we also recognize that the unique challenges posed by the Arctic environment demand an even higher level of scrutiny.
Although the probe falls short of environmentalists demands for a halt to all Arctic exploration that they deem too risky to allow, it could open the door to more limitations on the efforts and new safety regulations to guide the work. The Interior Department said the review, conducted by Acting Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management Tommy Beaudreau with help from the Coast Guard, would help inform future permitting processes in the region.
Shell has stressed that mishaps with the Discoverer and Kulluk were maritime incidents not drilling accidents. But the governments review is treating maritime movement of Arctic drilling vessels and equipment as inextricably tied to the exploration itself.
Energy experts and environmentalists said that approach makes sense.
One of the things this investigation might look at is what is the safe schedule for the transportation or equipment and drilling ships that are laden with oil and chemicals, said Amy Myers Jaffe, the executive director of energy and sustainability at University of California, Davis. Are there times of the year where they shouldnt be transporting that around because there are rough seas and storms come up suddenly?
Lois Epstein, Arctic director for The Wilderness Society, and a member of an Interior Department offshore safety advisory committee, stressed that marine transportation and Arctic drilling are interrelated.
You cant separate them, Epstein said. Its all got to be done well.
Epstein called the administrations move a significant look at lessons from a new generation of Arctic oil drilling.
With Shell, you have a very technically capable company and you have a well-funded operation. Noble, their contractor, is not a low-cost contractor, she noted. And yet together, they had a number of very serious problems.
Shell said in a statement that it welcomed the Interior Departments review.
While we completed our drilling operations off the North Slope safely and in accordance with robust permitting and regulatory standards, we nevertheless experienced challenges in supporting the program, especially in moving our rigs to and from the theater of operations, Shell said. We have already been in dialogue with the (Interior Department) on lessons learned from this season, and a high-level review will help strengthen our Alaska exploration program going forward.
Offshore drilling foes urged the White House to do a searching examination including a reassessment of its own plans to lease new Arctic waters for oil development.
Now is the time to stand up to Big Oil and with the American people, our oceans, and our public resources, said Mike LeVine, the Pacific senior counsel for the conservation group Oceana. The government must reassess its commitment to exploration in difficult places like the Arctic and how it makes decisions about our ocean resources. Shell has proven that it is not prepared to operate in Alaskan waters.
Greenpeace Deputy Campaigns Director Dan Howells predicted the review will surely find that Arctic drilling is far beyond the technical abilities of Shell or any other oil company.
Weve repeatedly been told Shell is the best in the business, and so we can only conclude after this series of mishaps that the best in the business is simply not good enough for the Arctic, he added.
Separately, the Coast Guard on Tuesday announced it was launching a formal marine casualty investigation into the Kulluks grounding, with special attention to the review of Shells tow plan and how equipment failures may have contributed to the accident. Shell has drawn scrutiny for sending the Kulluk on a two-week trek across the predictably stormy Gulf of Alaska on Dec. 21, when it saw clear weather, even though National Weather Service meteorologists say predictions are unreliable more than 60 hours out.
Shell finished boring the first half of two wells in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas last October. If regulators approve, the company plans to return to the area to finish those wells and drill additional ones.
The drilling unit Kulluk had already left the Arctic and finished the drilling for the season. It had multiple problems during the tow to a southern winter harbor for scheduled maintenance and upgrades.
Only Communist and Moslem countries will have access
to oil according to the Tyrant-by-Fraud.
I think Barry should hop on his sled and head out of Barrow Point and examine the area personally, right now. He can fire up AF1, it is used to flying on a moments notice, put a set of skis on it and head north to Alaska as the old Johnny Horton song said. I’d love to see his skinny ass in a parka hiking along in snow shoes waving to the throng in the dark. What a photo op that would be for him.
FTA: “In announcing the probe, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar stressed that the Obama administration is fully committed to exploring for potential in energy resources in frontier areas, such as the Arctic.”
Am so tired of BS.
Shell must not have kicked in enough protection money during the last campaign. Democrats and the Mafia are shake-down experts.
I read the title without the word "probe".
Try it...
Too risky? To whom or what? It's the fricking Arctic!
Its a government shake-down.
Maybe this is what Obama meant when he told the Russians he would have a little more latitude after the election.
With the right payment to a certain nine digit account in the the Caymans we could put a moritorium on drilling in the arctic.
Hey, it worked in the Gulf of Mexico.
Never let a crisis go to waste.
Shell had better be preparing for the same treatment BP received.
In announcing the probe, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar stressed that the Obama administration is fully committed to exploring for potential in energy resources in frontier areas, such as the Arctic.
“”Am so tired of BS””
I hear you and I second that. We all noticed that Salazar isn’t giving up his post. He needs to go too. A clean sweep of the cabinet is in order.
I have long since lost count of the issues that obozo is “fully committed to” and his LONG, LONG priority list with EVERY ISSUE at the TOP of that list!
We all know what his agenda is. He knows we know and he doesn’t care!!!
Democrats and the Mafia are one and the same these days aren’t they? I get the impression that Obama is a member of both organisations anyway!
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